THE COUNTY SEAT PAPER OF SHIAWASSEE COUNTY.

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1 lll^ mmmmmm 1CORUNNA JOURNAL( THE COUNTY SEAT PAPER OF SHAWASSEE COUNTY. QNE DOLLAR PKR YEAR. CORUNNA, MCH., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, VOLUME XXV, No, 41 h k. rt>' V m THE NEW COATS FOR WOMEN, MSSES AND CHLDREN ARE HERE We are now Knowng the new styles o "Wooltex" and "Prntsees" garments for Fal and Wnter. These two makes nclude many exclusve styles, not to be had elsewhere. Every garment s warranted by both the manufacturers and ourselves to gve satsfactory wear^ and best of all our prces are very reasonable. A few of our good coat values: At W-9S-Women's Btack Kersey Coats, 50 nches long; box back; satn lned yoke; brad trmmed.,, At #7.50 Women's Black Kersey Coats, 50 nches long; satn lned throughout: brad and velvet trmmed. At $T2.00-Women's heavyweght Kersey Coats, n sx dfferent styles black, castor, hunt* er's green and brown; satn lned wast; fancy brad trmmed; "Marchonest'* and "Prncess'" backs. At $15.00 Women's heavy weght Black Kersey Coats n fve dfferent styles; 50 nches long; fancy brad trmmed; new puff sleeves; "Marchoness" ; backs. At 1.6,50-Women's goodweght Black Broadcloth Coats, SO nches long; lned throughout wth satn; velvet and fancy brad trmmed; "Marchoness" backs. At $ Women's heavyweght Black Broadcloth Coats, 50 nches long; velvet and slk eord trmmed; lned throughout wth guaranteed satn; velvet and fancy brad trmmed; "Marchoneee" backs. At $19.98 Women's fne Broadcloth Coats, n black, brown t castor and dark wne; 50 and 52 nches long; full lned wth guaranteed satn; velvet and brad trmmed; "Marchoness" backs. At»20.00-Sx dfferent styles at ths prce black, brown, tan and castor hroad^loths; lned throughout wth guaranteed flatn; new puff sleeves; velvet and brad trmmed; "Marchoness" and "Prncess" backs. Other numbers of Women's Coats at $30, $35, $40 and $45. CHLDREN'S COATS An mmense stock- Broadtals Krmmer Astrakhan Bearskn Kerseys and Fancy Cbevota, n red, wne, brown, navy, green, gray and castor. Al szes, 2 to 14 years. Moderate prces, $2.98 to $8.50. RAN COATS FOR MEN AND WOMEN We have jvst receved a large stock Gun Metal. Oxford and Cambrdge; grav, tan, olve and black; $10 to $20. Come n and make a selecton whle tbe stock s at ts best. Yon can. select a garment now and we'll Jay t away for you upon payment of a small amount down balance may be pad at your convenence. The Lades' Home Journal Patterns are the practcal expressons of the fashon deas of the large staff of The Lades' Home Journal tself. Unless you are famlar wth The Journal, and the patterns, you are mssng some mportant' thngs whch modern enterprse U dong for Amercan women. We thnk the matter mportant enough to emphasze the fact that we can supply you wtb the patterns and also The Journal. The new Fall Quarlhrly Stylo Book, whch llustrates all The Journal patterns, s now on sale. Prce {ncludng any 15c Journal pattern), on 1 y "JOc. f ordered by mal, send S>: extra for postage. OSBURN & SONS, Owosso AT SSTER'S HOME COUNTY S. S. MEETNG. DEATH CAME QUCKLY, H. d. McCAUGHNA DEAD. NTO HS THGH, Death of Mss Lena Gbbons, Aged 19, Mel Trotter and Other Promnent. B. B. Hardy Wet! Known Farmer of Former Resdent of Byron Passed Carrage Thll Penetrated August Mc» Occurred Sunday Evenng. The death ol M** Lena Gbbocs, the Tbe twenty-nnth annual conyeoton nneteen year old daughter of James of the Shawassee County Sunday Gbbons, of Xew Haven townshp, co School Assocaton wll be held at Banenrred at 7 o'clock Sunday evenng at! croft, Monday and Tuesday, October U tbe home of Mr. and krs. R. A. Harmon and 15, a grand rally of Sunday workers workers on Program. n Ventee where sbe bad been vstng,' *nd frends are expected. Tbere are a Dabetes wth whch tbe deceased had number of fne speakers on tbe program suffered was tbe cause of her demse, j and the meetng promses to be one of Sbe was able to be n Owosso last week,! great nterest.and practcal value, and her condton was not consdered Tbe sessons open Monday evenng serous unft a day or two precedng tbe and contnue over Tuesday, day and tme of death. evenng. Tbe program s as follows: Mss Gbbons was an exceedngly MONDAY EVENNG. brght and attractve grl, of fne character Song servce. and lovable dsposton. She Devotons, conducted by Rev. A. graduated h» the Englsh course from Cook, of Durand. Corusna hgh school last June, and Address, Rev. Melvn E. Trotter, later receved a teacher's dploma, ntendng to teach ths fall. Appontment of Commttees. Grand Rapds. Besde*, the father there aresurvvng TCBSDAY MORNNG. three ssters and sx brothers. The ssters are Jula and Mare Gbbons, and Song wry lee. Bble Study, Rev. Melvn K. Trotter. Mrs. R. A. Harmon. Tbe brothers are The Sunday School a Mssonary Dan S. Gbbons, of Chcago; John M Factor, Rev. West, Perry. of Chcago; Dr. James E, of Concorda, Tbe use of the Bble n the Home, Kansas; Dr. Jerry B,of Flashng, and Fred Washburn, Benton Harbor. Denns and Joseph, of New Haven...- The Sunday School and tbe Home, Tbe funeral servces were held n St. Mrs* J. M. Truscott, Perry. Paul's church, Owosso, yesterday mornng. A number of ber old schoolmate* Class Organzaton, Rev. T. 0. Jones, Durand. and frends from ths cty attended the servces.... r, ". ' - Obetoate cases of constpaton and na?ty,hean headaches promptly dsap pears when vou take DeWtt's Lttle Early Rser Plls. Sold by C. M. Peacock..-, ^ ; '_ M. E. Church tems. ; Whst bas happened td tbe enthusastc offcers of our S. S. Mssonary Socety? We msaed the program last Sunday. Wo were pleased and gratfed wth our frst servce at the Hawk n* school house Sunday afternoon;. Tbe room was neat and attractve. furnubed wtb an organ, whch wtb several good voces, afforded helpful musc. There are good shedsfor teams on the grounds. We were cordally receved by a congregaton of good lsteners and nvted to come agan. We thought t beet to promse to preach there every other Sunday afternoon alternatng wth servces at the Kerby school bouse. Ths wll be tbe arrangement as long as t teems best ts> those nterested n the relgous welfare of tbe communty. At tbe offcal meetng Monday evenng, Mss Hatte Lyons was elected secretary and treasurer of tbe board of stewards for tbe ensung year. Tbe fnancal plan of last year was adopted and tbe same collectng stewards chosen wth the addton of Mrs. Woller. n bs sermon Sunday mornng tbe pastor wll consder tbe queston of "Partng From Chrst," and n tbe evenng tbe sermon wll be on tbe subject, "The Penalty of Wthholdng from the Lord What He Clams Hmself." '-Membershp n the Church" s tbe Ep worth League topc for the next devotonal meetng. TCESDAT AFTERNOOH, Deyotous, Bey. Martn, Morrce. Easness Sesson, Reports and electon of offcers. Secton Conference n charge of Fred Washburn. A square look at mportant Sunday School Questons. B. 3. Strattoc, W, H. Spltler, W. L. Parker, Mrs. E. A, Con vs, /-.',. Townshp Problems, J. C. Curts, E. B. Putnam, Wlle Wllougnby, W. H. Whte,,.,,.,. A tbe same tme, and at another church wll be be d a rrlmakt CONKERKNCE n charge of Mrs. M. H. Reynolds, county superntendent. Practcal plans for elementary prmary work, Mrs. Fred Wasbburn. Open conference. A model lesson, taught by Mrs. Washburn. TUESDAY EVENNG. Song seryce. Devotons, Rev. Stevens, Bancroft Address, mportance of Chrstan Tranng, Mrs. Fred Wasbburn. Address, Equpment for Servce,Rev. C. M. Keene. Farmers, mechancs, ralroaders, laborers, rely on Dr. Thomas' Eclectrlc Ol. Takes tbe tng out of cuts, barns or bruses at once. Pan cannot stay where t s used. 1 When and ffnat to Shoot Below we gve a few extracts from tbe state game *&ws w» < be of!s* terest to local sportsmen: Deer open season November 10 to 30 nclusve. Unlawful to kll wtbont havng procored a lcense. Resdent hunter's lcense x $1 50; non-resdent hunter's lcenfe $25, Unlawful for any person to kll more than two. Squrrel open season for fox, black and gray, from Oct 15 to Nov. 30, n You never have any trouble to get chldren to take Kennedy's Laxatve Cough Syrup. They lke t because t tastes nearly lke maple sugar. Kenne- j clusve. Unlawful to kll any prrvate dy's Laxatve Cough Syrup s asafe,] or buc k or lo QCO rporated sure and prompt remedy for cougbs and j. ** uu " c *""* " 1U MJ WWHWWU colds and s good for every member of j cty or v» la e - the famly. Sold by C. M. Peacock.! Mnk, raccoon, skunk and muskrat unlawful to kll durng September and W. R. C. Conventon. October. The Scb dstrct conventon of tbe j Patrdge and qual-open season from Woman's Relef Corps wll be held n 0et - 12 to Nov> * > nclusve, Unlawtbe court bouse on October 17tb, nst. All Corps of the county wll be represented, also delegates from Fenton, Flnt, Mt. Morrs, Clo and Vassar. Mr?. Adela Ptcber, of Va*sar, presdent of tbe dstrct, wll have charge of tbe conventon. Tbere wll be department offcers n attendance. H. F. Wallace, Corps No. 133, wll be tbe entertanng Corps. SOO Reward $100. Tbe readers of tos paper wll be pleased to le rn that there s at least one dreaded dsease tu&t scence bag Ken able to cure u all stages, and that s catarrh. Hal'* CaUrrb Cure s the only postve cure now known to tue medcal fraternty. Catarrh beng a consttutonal dsease, requres a consttutonal treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure s taken nternally, actng drectly upon tbe blood and raucous surfaces of tbe system, thereby destroy]og the foundaton of tbe dsease, and gvng the patent strength bv bt'smln? up the consttuton and assstng nature n dong ts work. Tbe propretor* have so much fath n ts curatve powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any oae that t fals to cure. Send for lst of testmonals. Address: F.J. Cheney & Co, Toledo, O. Sold by druggsts 75c. Ttke Hars Famly Plls for constpaton. fu to kll more tbau 12 n any one day or to baye more than 50 n possesson at any one day or to have more than 50 n possesson at any one tme. Homng pgeons and mournng doves Unlawful to kll or capture at any tme. Duck, plover, snpe, woodcock at-d any knd of water fowl open season from Sept. 1 to Jan. 1, [delusve. Ducks a Ld geese m?y also be klled from March 2 to Aprl 25, nclusve, Unlawful to kll more than 25 n any one day or baye more than 75 n possesson at any one tme. Here s Relef for Women. f you have pans n tbe ba«k, Urdary, Bladder or Kdney trouble, and Tvant a certan, pleasant herb cvre. for woman's lls, try Mother Gray's Australan-Lea,?, t s a safe and never-falng monthly regulator. At Dnu^jjsta or by rnml O els. Sample package FREE. Address, The Mother Gray Co., L-eRoy, N. Y. Corunna Hgh Lost. The game of footb?.?.! between Corunna hgh and St Johns hgh on tbe local Held last Saturday was won by tbe Sants by a. score o 6 to 0. Nether soe scored n tbe frst half. Tbe teams are vory evenly matched and car boys expect W wn when they play the retan game. Bennngton. Away n owa Has Relatves Here. Cartnty's Leg Two nches. Sfturday nght, Sept, 28, at the famly horn* n Bennngton, sx mles south of Owosso, occurred tbe death of B B, Hardy, a well known resded of Sbawasses county. Mr. Hardy has been n ll health for over a year, but untl tbe past three weeks had been able to be about hs farm. Hopes were held out for hs recovery up to the day of bs death, when be began to fal very rapdly. Hs famly, consstng of bs wfe, son and two granddaughters, were wth hm at tbe tme of hs death. trouble was tbe drect cause. Heart Mr. Hardy was nearng hs seventyfrst brthday and bad been a resdent of Shawassee county for forty-two years. He was known tbrougbont tbe county, havng flled several offces. He was town treasurer for Bennngton for two years, supervsor, and drac coramseouer and was up to the Ume of bs death an actve member of the Graoge. DeWltt's Carbotzed Wtch Hazel Salve la good for lttle boms and bg bums, small scratches or bruses and bg ones. t s healng and soothng. Good for ples. Sold by C. 3L Peacock. VSTED DURAND. Hgh Offcals of Grand Trunk nspected New Round House. Dursnd, Oct 5.-Offcals of the Grand Trunk ralroad. ncludng the thrd vce presdent and other hgh offce holders, were n Durand, Thursday afternoon. Tbe party traveled n a tram composed of four specal cars. A tour of nspecton was made of the round boute and macblne shops bengerected, t beng of nocb nterest to the bfrcnls. l*hls fs the second largest round house of the entre system, and the general plans and equpment are the most modern of any. The offcals made the longest stop n Durand of any place en the tnerary of the trp, the Mood: Cflxat* (gtatmanq fw Mrs. Geo. W. Keyaa. After an llness of many months, Mrs. Geo. W. Keyes, one of tbe oldest and most respected ctzens of Burns townshp, ded at be" home Thursday morn* log, Sept 26,1907, aged 57 years. She had been fang rapdly the past few weeks, beng confded to bed the greater part of tbe tme. Emly Jane Shepsrd was born Augnst e, 1850, n tbe townshp of Argentne, beng tbe eldest of seven chldren, fve of whom survve ber. n 1863 sbe was marred to Geo. W. Keyes and came to Burns townshp, where she resded untl ber death. Mrs. Keys was hghly esteemed among ber many neghbors, beng always ready and glad to help them n tme of trouble, untl poor bealtb prevented ber gong among them. Sbe was a devoted mother and home maker, and for a number of years bad been t member of tue Lady Maccabees, n whch she took great pleasure. Funeral servces were held at ber late home last Saturday afternoon, conducted by Rev. Wrght, of Ganes. laterment at Unon PJaue. Deceased s survved by ber husband, three sons and one daughter, who were all able to be wtb ber durng ber last llness. Byron Herald. A, McCaugbna, of ths cty, receved August McCartney, of Owosso. who word Krday of the death of bs oldest s employed n the Ann Arbor shops; son, Hugb James McCaugbna, Sbanendoah. owa, after a year's Hnesg. Mr. severe r jury of a pecul«ar character. was tbe vctm Frday evenng of a McCaugbna, who s survved by a wdow McCartney on hs wheel was rdng toward home tn Corunua avenue when n and one son, came to Byron wth bs parents ffty-fve years ago, and spent tbe sem-darkuess bo collded at a crossbs boyhood days n Shawassee county.'-[»g wtb a rg contanng a young man He went west about thrty years ago and a grl. Oue thll struck hm n the and has been n busness n Shacendoab j thgh, and penetrated the flesh for a dtadurng the past twenty years. He was tance of fully two nches, causng * rag* a brother of.hravt. M. Kuler, 418 Eastjged wound u to whch peces of bs Mason St., and Maj. Geo. B. McCaughaa, clothng were drven McCartney"* who returned but a few days ago from sde was also hurt Dr. flame does oafr Sbaneodoah. Argus. The Crcut Court Geo. Bgnal vf. Grn Perce, John Clay et ajl vs. Cbarlea Hart, Zorette Valbrect vs. John Foote contnued. Mchael Roarke vs. Wllam Key, beleve tbe njury s dangerona, hot McCartney wll be n ca pad ted for work for some tme, He s marred and about thrty years of age. He s lucky to have escaped a broken leg. Baptst Church Notes. Cornnna MUlng Co. vs. Judsou Broth- WUh Qext Sondsy we enter opw ts* era, settled. thrd pastoral year.tbe two years Martn Comstosk vs. Clark Taggart' aave gefved the church have been years et a!, judgment for defendant for «1466, j, pf. peasan^ess, and rch wth blessng. Peter Jester vs. Andrew Jester, nob-j ABWe et sprt of unty and love ha* pr«- sut entered. Duqueane Natonal Bank vs. C. B. & W. D, Garrson, verdct for defendant Emma Thompson vs. Fred Alderton et. al., plantff gven a judgment for sx cents and costs. Wllam Drueke & Co. vs. Lous Sanderboff, judgment for plantff for « ;:""...,,; ' ' : - ;:. :. Ward Dalegalea, 1ST WARD. W, A. Roeenkrans. W.J.Parker. A. RBJcbards, Erwln Eveletb. J H.Uolllnt. John A, W»t»oo. Frank Welch.. Wo, K.Jacobs. Walter McBrlde. 3R!> WARD. Frank C. Gale. James J. Peacock. DEATH OF Q A. SMTH. Ded n Hosptal at Ann Arbor Week Tuesday. Last Judge Quncy A. Smth, of Lansng, brother of the late Stearns F. Smth Of ths county, ded at Ann Arbor hosptal Sept 241¾ Tbe remans were taken to Detrot for crematon. Deceased-was born n Oho and was about 02 years of age. He moved to Perry when but a small chld wth bs parents. He was a school teacher and left that occupaton to study law n the offce of W. M. Klpatrck, and graduated from the law department of tbe Unversty of Mlchgen n 1S71. He was elected judge of probate for ngham county n 1$84, and has snce resded n that county. He leaves a wdow and two daughters and a brother, who resdes n Chcago. Real EstateTranefers. L. Knney to N. Marshall and wfe, lots 9 and 10, block 4, Da way & Stewarts addton. Owosso, 500. F, Decker to J. Keage and wfe, lot 3, Johnsons addton, Owosso, 450. J. Lynch to B. Launstne, part; secton 21, Owosso, C. Collns to B. Kbler, part lot 6, f you take Ds Wtt's Kdney and Blad-!..., a rxmmfn 1Jrtn der Plls you wll get prompt relef from DlocK 1?5 ' ^wosso» lw - backache, wt-ak kdneys, nflammaton of tbe bladder and urnary troubles. A week's treatment 25 ceots. Sold by C. M. Peacock. SECOND HGH WNS. Dutch Town Eagles, of West Owosso, Had Feathers Plucked. J. Drscall et. al. to A. Goodall and wfe, part secton 6, Vernon, G. Clark to C. Gau&sley and wfe, part secton 5, Vernou, O. Hettson to D. Johnson and wfe, lots 5 t 6, and part of 7, block 10 Thomas' addton, Corunna, 550. V. Marsh to W. Colby, land on secton 21 and 22, Woodhull, Tbe RoyaJ Month and the Royal Dsease Tbe Dutch Town Ragles, of West Sudden changes of weather are espce- Owosso, an mtepemleut and a stalwart ally tryng, and probably to none more eleven, came over to our cty Saturday *? tu»» tb^ fu j, " S a? d, ^DSUU PV..,..,,. tve. Tbe progress of scrofula durng a; wth a deter Jnaton to claw a vctory nottatk\ October s commonly great We from our fast second hgh eleven. Tbe never thnk of scrofula ts bunches,' battle raged ferce and strong for forty cutaneous erupton?, and wastng of tbe mnutes and at the end our eleven had '' b d5l y substaoce-wubeut thnkng of tbe game by a score of 11 to ^, A re- tbe great good many sufferers from t tarn game wll soon be played. nave derved from Hood's Sarsaparllla, whose radcal and permanent cures of tbs one dsease are enough to make t Don't get out of patence wth tbe baby when t H peevhb and restless^od don't wear yourself out worryng nght and day about t just «?tve t a lttle Ca«casweet Cascasweet s a correctve for stomachs of babes and chldren. Contans no harcsfal drags. Sold by CM. Peacock. the most famous medcne n tbe world. There 's*probaby not u cty or town where Hood's Sarsapartllafca* not proved ts mert n more homes than one, n arrestng and completely eradcatng scrofula, whch s almost as serous and as ^ucb to be feared n* ts near relatve, cooeompttoa. vaded all our servces and all our efforts* The outlook s brght, the future s bg wth promse. The church s thor* ougbly unted. We enter upon tb thrd year wtb great bopefulbess. We verly expect ths year wll transcend all other yean, and one year from BOW we wll all have occason to say, "Set what the Lord bath wrought," **PratW Hm From Whom All Blessngs Flow. n Next Monday mornng the pastor wll take for bs subject, *V^1 Hands Together," 9Hd n tbe evenng, "Moant Sna, or ths Revelatoo of G Od." Allance Elects Offcers. Tbe New Haven Proh b t ton AlUoMt gare a program and held ther tenpuv Xew Haven WeslVB church, Tuesday evenng, October l*t The electon was as follows: Presdent, saac Smth; Vce-Presdent James Hopson, Jr.; Treasurer, Wesley Spttler; Chaplan, Rev, C. M. Keys; Marshal, Lev Cram. Rummage Sale. The Lades 1 ' Ad Socety of the M. E, church wll bold a rummage sale n the Commercal House, Oct 23, 24 and 35th j wtb an ndvdual chcken pe sapper,!oct2o. 41-S j u- Yon do not have to be a busness man n order to have a.. Bank Account«f you are a salary man, f yea are a retred farmer, you need a bank account. t wll be an advantage to yon n any case. A bank account wll ad yon to keep your busness transactons straght. A bank account furnshes yon wth a complete record of money matters. Yon have a record of all money deposted wth the hank, also a record of every bll you pay by check. Each check s returned to you by the bank and answers as a recept. OFFCERS AND DRECTORS W. F. Gallagher, - Pros. John Drscoll, Vce Pres. T. M.Euer, 2d Vce Pres. W. A. Rosenkrans, Casher E. T. Sdney, Ass't Casher Four per cent. nterest Pad on Deposts THE OLD CORUNNA STATE T* A4. Change Wtcklf. "^. LKS&SEa' ' "MtM Zllgpfldnttf

2 l-t Women as Well as Men Are Made Mserable by Kdney Trouble. Kdney trouble preys upon the mnd, dst and lessens ambton; beauty, vgor and cheerfulness soon dsappear when the kdneys are out of order or dseased. Kdney touble has become so prevalent that t s not uncommon for a chld to be born 1 afflcted w»th weak kdneys. f the chld urnates too often, f the wne scalds the flesh or f, when the chld peaches an age when t should be able to control tho passage, t s yet afflcted wth tad-wettng, depend upon t. the cause of the dffculty s kdney trouble, and the frst step should be towards the treatment of these mportant organs. Ths unpleasant troub't s due to a dseased condton of the kdneys and bladder and <ot to a habt as most people suppose. Women, as well as men are made mserable wth kdney and bladder trouble^ and both need the same great remedy. Tfce BBld and the mmedate effect of Sw*f>*Root s soon realzed. t s sold fey druggsts, n fftycent and one dollar rses. You may have a ample bottle by mal tee, abo pamphlet tell- Hoc* <* swamp-root. t>c *H ebout t, ncludng many of the thousands of testmonal letters receved from sufferers cured. n wrtng Dr. Klmer «s Co.. Bngharaton, N. Y., be sure and ewantoo ths paper. Doe't make any mstake, bur remeobefthe name, Swamp Root Dr. Kte's Mvamp-Root.ad toe address, Bjugb&mtoa. Nr, T ou every bottle, S TATS Or MCHGAN. County ot Sbawaa- 1 * * * ; <» *.. As* aesfttob of l>«probate Court for sad Gvaxj, feeld at the Prt>bat* Offlce, lathe Cty «T Oecvnaa, on Wednesday, the 18th day. of Beytenber n the year one tboumtnd nne knndredand aeren. Present, Matthew Bnsa, Jndjre of Probate, la tb«natter of toe estate-of Patrck Co'tfee- M OHTGAGE SALE Wherf**, default has been made n tbe condtons of a certan uortjf^e, m«d»4 executed by Wllam H. Frend and «*ry S. rrleod. ht. wre, of Bfoo, Shawassee County, Mchgan, at t*e nntt pa*'t,; to Orlando Lee, of Bj-on, SUla«aasc.e County,] Mchgan, of tbe seeosd part, ou the 28th day ; gf Juoe, A r D. 1S9S, aad recorded 1c the ofllrc of j the Regster of Deeda for sad County, n Lber 49 of Mortf*»:*» ou page 2, on tbe 29th day of June, A. >, fsft, on whu-b mortgage there * yv.wstfd tofe due at the dstte ot, ths*, "s^rtee* fot-l ph'.mpal and ntfcreat, the sum of Two Bur T dred hrt.v-bjrht *u<k 77-1C0 Dollars»3«.77), J and no.sun or proceed rw at law or n equty havng oeen taken to recover the money secured by >ad mortgage, <>» any part thereof, notce ' s hereby *v«n, that by vrtue or the power of sate contaned n sad ogttff&ge, and the statutes n sueb cane made, aud ptovded, aad mort^a^e wu be foreclosed *>>" * *'* * ^041 pr*** - ses dekt't'.ted the.-eln, or»o much, thereof an may be neeessctor to bullsfj' the &a'.c sum of money K>wdue. thereon, together wth nterest thereon at tla*- rate of seven per cent, per auma, fro& the. lae ot luu notu-e, together wth a'a'oraey'j fee of T^evty pulan, as provded a SHW uorl^'ftk*, ; yethtr wth»11 tejral voatfc anu rxjwusrs of ths ft>re::l*sure, ft publc aucton or vendue.'to the h^bent bdder, st tue from JmroMhe Court House, n the Cty of Co'utUH, Mchgan (-ad t'ourt HOUM* JHUJT the buldng h wh-b 1 l' lrcu Court for -»w;s-«* Coou'.v, Mchrau, a held), ou the,;»3rrl ltty <>f S.,\»»ut^v, A. *. 190*. a.t teu o'clock"n the h,rfnx; of --td day. The premses are descrjed n.-*ad njortjzjvps as folovvk, to-wt: Al th:»t ccrt.-tn pece or par- <-e of laud stuate au'l bcln^' u the VUajse of Byr, Oouy. >/ S»lawaw*e and Mate of Mh-'h^HT), kw*' a-s Ulovk number Eghty Kf/ht (SS), u the Va^e of Byron. County of SlnwasMce, aud ttatcot Mchgan. Dated A up lst SSrtb, A. D K<t'«7-0K.AN.)O LEE, AUSTN E. RCHAKDS>. Mortgagee. Attorney for Mort}>apee. SN UPON SN &t*pfeytk*p Davd treads tbe maze of «a. STORY BY THE "HGHWAY AND BYWAY" PREACHER <.C>P>'r) bl, w', 4»y tl«autbur, W, 3. Ednox.; Authorty: 2 Samuel Scrpture U:6-27. >QOOOQ SERMONETTE. OB readlnpand flng the petton of Anna G. j McKowen, prayng for an ofder of ths eonrt j determndg who n% the tme of hs devea.se sod vhoare now t*e he at law of sa4d deeea*e4 and enttled to nhert hs real estate, t a ordered, that tbe 14th day of October, xext, at ben o'etock n the forenoon, at mk Ptvbate offce, be assgned for heurnp sak; V*«tton,. And t s farther, ordered, tbrtt a copy of ths ««ter be publshed. thre«sttoeessye weeks peerknu to sad day of hearnjr, n the Comnna Joer, a newspaper prnted and crculatng ta wmd County of ahawassee. MAtTHEW BFSH, J'udge of Protjate. Br Smtberne K. Eclser, Probate Regster. Any One Can DRAW nwwpw sot well, but every pernon CWB» * Uttle. Many people poaaeas tae latent for art work and never realtxe t. f y*u wll make a drawng Jnat tbe beat job can and aend t to our Art Ptreetor le wll gve you a letter of frfcndlt chhttwaawt FREf ADVCE am to waafcer or sot t wll pay yoa to eautvau year talent. There a abaof«*aly ao Harare for thla *errle<». Uca> taatu earn large a».l»r««, and tbe war% ta faaeaatlnr. We t**ch Book, Haa atm* aad Coauaamlal lunatrausa, Carooatnat Poater Dr^wnf, Book Cto*w DaoJffBlaf aad PaakMa Drawlaj aauaaafally by eorscopobden«e. Wrte Mt eoatpmte sane and addreaa planly a yo**drt»wr>*. eacloae wtamp to pay wmmum k 70«wab yonr drawng re* Mraaa, mm addrcaa TOT ART OtRECTOK, Correspondeoce lostttbtje of Amerca, Scranton, Pa. "Wo «M»ea*h ll!«a«ntnr, AdTor- lambc ProwfYawflbg, ^ooraallam, Bfoyrapby, Show Card Wrtng, Bwwkkaeptas, Ktectrlral Kag»««r- < ;, Knaaoaa «rr«*po»4eae«and Magl^fc Braaehoa. f nterested n a*y of tbe above pro* feaatoca. wr'te for our Large llustrated twok, "Struggle* Wth the World." t s.jnuck. State vbch course nterests yon, anj receve one of onr Ewploywent Contract*. be»t propot»oc ever offered. eraes?owktd[mwu[ra, BOX 765, SCRANTON, PA. C OMMSSONE^f?' NOTCE. n the matter! of the estate of f ran t. Earrer, deeeased. 1 We, the Mndefsljyned, havu^ been apponted ; by tbe Hon. Matthew Bush, Jud^e of Probate! n aud for the County of Shawassee, State or j Mk-hjfa, Commssoners to receve, exaujue, and dja&c all clams and demansof all, persons aganst sad estate, do nert-by jfve notce that we wll meet at tbecorunna Journal Prnt-; ng Offce n the Cty of Cornnna n sad county, on Monday, the Slat day of October, A- t>. [ 1S07. and on Monday, the 23rd day of Dee- j ember, A. D. 1907, at ten o'clock n the fore- ' noon of each of &ad days, for the purpose ot recevng and adjustng all clams aganst sad ; estate, and that fo-or monthsfrod the 20th d»y Antruft, A. X>. 1907, are allowed to credtors; fcurew ther clams o sad Commssoners for adjustment and allowance. Dated, the 23rd day of August, a. D FRANK E. WBLflH, osera H. COLLNS, Commssoners. O RDER OF PUBLCATON. State of Mchgan. n the Gro Ht Court for the County, of Shawassee, n Chancery., Sopha Com wall Complanants. Henry Cornwall Defendant. Sut pendng n the Crcut Court for the Countv of Shawassee, n Chancery, at tbe Cty j of Cornnna. n»ad County, on the 7tb day of September. A. D. 1» 7. J n ths cause t sppearnfr from affdavt on j fle, that the Defendant, Henry Cornwall: s not, a resdent of ths State, bnt resdes at Oakland, n the State of Calforna j On moton of V. U. Dnsenbtry, complanant'!* wolptor. t s ordered that the.sad defendant H«T J! y Cornwall catnse hp. appearance ; tobeenlerel n ths cause wtbn four month!)' front the flnte'r.f tbq.order;. and n case of ¾ts appearance he cause hs answer to the Complanant's bll of Cfpplalnt tobe fled, ann a copy t l e reof be, served oh. sad sol e tor for the complanant, Wthn twenty day* after servce On x»m non resld'cnt Defendant of a cov>' of tac bll, and notce o! ths.'.rder; and that n default thereof. a»w bll be taken aa eonfeaaed by the sad non-resdent defendant. And t s further ordered, that wthn twenty days the aald complanant canne a notce of ths order to be publshed n the Cornnna Journal a newspaper prnted, pablabed and. Crculatng n sad conny, and that»«ch pub* lcaton be contloned theren at leaat once n eaet. week, for elx wt«ka n ancceaaon, or that she cause a copy of tbl«crder to be personally aerved 0«aad Bon-reatdeot defendant, at leaat twenty days before tbe tne above prescrbed for hs appearance. ROT K. Dt'tkHOf, Crcut Court Coma»a*o«er, ShUwaaae* County, Mlrh. F. H. D^txkt'ar; - Snful ndulgence n an dle hour mads Cavd a murderer, kttle dd he thnk on that frst nght of pleasure to what awful depths hs sn was to lead hm. But the pathway of $rt leads downward and ever farther and farther away from God. One wrong step s taken n the desre to gratfy some unholy longng and then a dozen more steps are found necessary n the. attempt.o coyer up the traces of the snful conduct. % The progressveness of sn s O one of ts most strkng char- 0 acterstcs. No one starts cut 9 wth the purpose, or even ex- 2 pectatcn, of becomng a mur- /J derer. The boy wth hs frst O glass, or hs frst nght out n questonable companonshp, does not stop to thnk what the full fruton cf hs frst msstep may be. The man who takes hs frst flng at specula* ton -Joes not see hmself an embezzler behnd the bars, dsgrace and sufferng brought upon hs nnocent wfe and chldren. He begns Wth the expectaton of wnnng ard ac- 'Thore was eo other way." he exclamed under hs breath. "Had be not been sp nfernally obstnae al would have been well, and now all wll be well, anyway, hazard." That had been an awful njrht fcr hm. No sleep trad come to stll-the rage or quet the fears whch flled hs heart. But amdst all the con- fctlng emotons whch surged lke j the restlesa'/sea back and forth wth- n hs heart there was the one settlod j purpose to cover up and hde the ' sn whch had ecme to blacken and scar hs lfe. To ae that sn had ssemed lko a smj.e and easy, thng at f!''st, but as'' hs every :an had benn barfled t made hm " almost: mad. wth.mpatence and a btter hatred sprang?jp ac';anat the man whom h^ had.u g'-evousjy won.v.'eu. At frst he bad only.fe''c good-natured contfnpt for hm, and t was wth rather'a feelng ' of cc!!(:tsc:?>:on on hs >art" that he had coat wtfhrn at all. But Davd : was; too hp?h-m:'!d^d a n-an, and had too dear a concepton of rght and AROUND THE STATE. St. Anns Catholc church, partly destroyed by fre n June, wll be re dedcated by Bshop Rchter, of Grand Rapds. D. E. Goodwn, a U. of M. junor medcal student, has been awarded a Rockefeller scholarshp n the New York nsttute. Mlton Ross, of Traverse Cty, shot Peter Snyder's dog, clamng t bt hs horses. Snyder sued and the Jury brought n a verdct for?70 for the plantff. Harold, the 16-months-otd nfant of \V. A. Andrews, a Lapeer prnter, drank kerosene from a bottle and nearly ded before a physcan arrved and appled the stomach pump. Wllam Welch, aged 52, was klled by a M. C. swtch engne n bay Cty, and because hs mother s 96 years old and n feeble health, she has been told that he has gone on a trp. The drowned body of. Wn'. Braceln, propretor of the Braceln hotel, Allegan, was found n the rver at the rear of hs place Sunday mornng. t wrong not to be conscous way down ; s thought hs death was purely accdo?]) n hs heart that he "had oom-'> dental. kntted a gevou>> sn, and yet there was present the stubborn purpose to justfy and pa.lh'ftt'e.'..h.v3...ofens.e.. He ref:.:'"!e behnd hs kngly pre-" Hayes Brown, a popular young marred man of St. Joseph, has dsappeared, and nether relatves, frends or the polce have the slghtest clue as to hs whereabouts. Hs wfe s prostrated. Mrs. Kyle Crawford, of Petoskey, took rogatves and power, and, found comfort the fhdgnt that the kngs of ether natons dd even worte -h.gs...., -,«...».,. ;.-.., t,/, 1,.,,1 *^~ j ded verj suddenly Sunday nght at..11,1a > had done.,. ', ) the borne other sster,.mrs. R. Fearh-! And yet, notwuhstandnj? tns.feel- ley_ j n Reed Cty, whom she was vls- ng wbch he tr:d to encourage.; jtng. She bad just arsen from the nr.:::< 4 ly, that thr* Kng could" do no [ supper table when she expred, wren- he d.=.d uot want hs >n to be- j a has developed that the young man j eorae known,.'.nd determned from': who ded a week ago of paralyss s j the frst that t shoultl m>t. Thus he Charles Wolf, of Wllamsvllle, N. Y, r j was led to r.«-nd for Urah, ant wh**n ; nstead of George Wlson, the name by <* 'hs Plans mscarred, as w< ; have sad. j waeh. ne was *«nown n Flnt. He s 9 \ t threw hm nto a rage of fear atkd j «-d to have been wellconnected. anger. Tbe very ovalty and fath-1 The defense of Charles Rchardson, j fulness whch Urah dsplayed towarfl.; a ne ST» ^ p? b^n?. a Lansng house, hm aud the naton served to ntens- fy- and aggravate hs vexaton of sprt, and on that last nght, as Sour Stomach No appette, loss of strength, nervoorft neas, headache, constpaton, bad breath, generaj deblty, sour rsngs, cno* catarj of the stomach are all due to ndgeston. Kodo) releve* ndgeston. Ths new dscovery represents the natural juce* of dgeston as they exst n a healthy stomach, combned wth the greatest known tonfa and reconstructve propertes. Kodo for dyspepsa does not only releve ndgestoa and dyspepsa, but ths famous remedy helps all stomach troubles by cleansng, purfyng, sweetenng and strengthenng the mucous membranes lnng the stomach. Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W, Va.. ssyk ' was troubled wth tour stomach for twenty years. Kodo! cured ma «4 we are sow uajnf tt la m* forbd?." Kodo} Dgests What You Eat Bctle* tmf. Releves ndgeston, aour Aoraaca, v belchr.? of pas, etc Prepared by F- O. OeWTT & CO., CHQAOOk Sold-'by C. M. PEACOCK Ask for the )907 Kodo AJmanac and 200 Year Calendar. Solctor for <o<npla 3aj>t. RuelntM AddreM: Sf*. PleMMtt, Mch. qurng rches quckly, Perhaps,..,..., he does wn and s tempted to ** havr ' sad - EO, sleep came to re- 90 n more heavly. He loses, & ljcv " e tn? slres *. a ' mmd, ; ftnd, b0(1^ ' And then had come a new fear to j vex (1hm; Coud t be that Urah's. y. 'refusal to return home wasdue to the G j fact that he had some suspcon as 5! to' the true state of affars? Ar nght j-long the queston had rankled n hs bosom, and a rark resolve began to form tself wthn. -Urah-must be put 6uT of the w^y. When the thought frst flashed j across hs mnd lke an evl message j from the kng of darkness, he trem- Ked as an aspen and. turned from t wth sckenng dread, but each tme as he came face to; face wth the alternatve: of exposure and dsgrace, he entertaned more wllngly the evl thought, and at last found hmself plannng how t mght be carred o.t. At frst Davd thought to pay bg money to some base fellow who would secretly fat upon Urah and take hs lfe, but even n the fear and confu- 6TATK OF MCHGAN, *T JUDCAL CRCUT. TKRXA O> CBfuT Cona-p. n pnrwu«see of Ue-ft»tpt«n»aeh exse na4nd provded, do herebyfx «.nd appont tbe trop for holdng the several termb of tbe Crcut Court tt» the Thlrtj-HftJ Judcal Crcut of Mchgan, for tbe years 1W6 1SK» a.» t6howh: SHlAWA!»!E COCWTV. On the FourlL Monday D January, Frst MondaT n Mfvy and thf! Second Holdays u September ad November. -V'SOSTOS COKNTT. On the Frst Monday n January, tbe Thrd MOCKHV n October and the Second Muuay* u Aprl and June.' SELDEN S. MNER, September 9th, 1007, Crcut Judge. Smokeless Powder Shells "LEADER" and "REPEATER" The superorty of Wnchester Smokeless Powder Shells s undsputed. Among ntellgent shooters they stand frst n pop* ularty, records and shootng qualtes. Always use them for feld or Tra > Sbootng* 3 Ask Your Dealer For Them. -, and then borrows that he may speculate further to retreve hs losses. Agan he loses. He must have money to pay the oan. He betrays hs trust and "takes the money he needs from hs employer, or from funds entrusted to hs care, expectng to pay t back as soon as hs luck turns, as he says. And so t goes on, step at a tme, untl' at last be s runed beyond the hope, of recovery. And so t te Wth any cnful course upon whch one may enter. f t takes 40 tes to cover up the frst te told, BO s t wth other form* of sn, t takes nnumerable wrongs to cover tp»nd hde the frst wrong done. But what folly for the soul to thnk that t can cover and hde ts sn. "Be sure your sn wll fnd you out," s the solemn warnng of Scrpture, And agan God's Word declares that "he that covercth hs sns Bha not prosper." What utter folly then fpr the human heart to go blndly on n sn, thnkng that t can deceve God and man. Some day all the snful conduct wll be revealedn all ts awfulness. The power to resst tn s weakened the farther one goes on m hs. snful course. n Proverbs 5:22 the sns- are lkened unto cords that bnd one. There comes to mnd the story of Gullver n the land of the L H puts. The tny creatures bound the great g3nt wth ther fral, flmy threads, whch he mght have blown away -wth a breath, but whch n the aggregate formed a strong cord whch covered hm lke a web and rendered hm powerless to resst the attacks of hs lttle enemes. So s t wth sn., Let us remember, also, that however much we may deceve the world, we cannot deceve God. '*My sns are not hd from thee," exclam* the psalmst. Nether more are yours and mne. ooooc<>ooo<>o<>ooc<>o<>oc^ THE STORY. ; was that he bad the morphne habt and he ddn't know.-yhat he was do- Jnjr.. However, Rchardson kaew what happened when the court sad "Fve hears at ona." j State Lve Stock nspector John Mc Kay s.watchng the Mnt townshp herd of cattle nvaded by a rabd dog, whose btes klled two steers and sent two mople to.ann Arbor for the Pas* four treatment. He has placed toe entre herd n quarantne. Edward A. Blakeslee, member cf tno state pardon board, s nvestgatng the pardon applcaton of John Allson, the Rchland bank robber, who efh caped after beng sentenced to 1¾ 1 years and was marred and leadng an honest lfe when arrested agan. Reports from outlyng dstrcts ot St. Joseph state that, the potato crop s sufferng heavly from the long contnued wot weather. Rot has set n ohd unless dry weather cornea to the rescue of the potato an mmense loss wll be sustans. Corn s also sufferng. Because he has shown mjgn* of a* santy, Roy Waterman s beng held n St, Joseph n the county jal. H«has been preachng on the streets t»e acemwy and fs!h*!tty of STEVt^S Kte J and Shotguns ha*"nou fcr then an env»jl* repetano»»eu&rl(l aver. Ov:r l^o-page EOOZ ON FBEAaaS, FttSB. Hcontrn^ a Erf dpskrprton <.f STtVl.VS Ana*. ftso val '.o jr.t<.mat.'.o rn lv.ntn^', t.le proper care 01' f.r«nns, n< ttt '.n sgtt, Jraantrm. el. Yen shoufl have t. S«r.d twt s-.tat stamps to " Stevecs*rUyr»rrf -!r--', ** AA '«Cra«kShot t f *..,, Stevees Uttje Kntff,".. 5.0» "Favote.rSo. 17," CLEVFR, RFLE njzttlb vtnt FREE.poapsfet J. STKVBKS AMS * TOOL CO _' "P.O.8^x4093. CffCOPEE VXL1JS. HAS&, V.S.A, >«* awt.1 ' d NAFEWBASTERS poor A* nslmn sff the mtttent ttw fest*wfcbsltsauw*roat.»* son of bs rand he quckly saw the dressed n shrt and trousers. He *> dangers attendng such a course, j tended the medcal department of tb«what then was he to do? Mow could he accomplsh hs purpose? The seemng mpossbltes n the way served to ntensfy the evl purpose of hs heart. Ah, how often the better mpulses came! How repeatedly the nner conscence spoke aganst dong such evl thng, and each tme there came back the challenge from h» fear-strcken heart, "but your sn and the exposure whch s certan to follow." And then came the rrevocable decson to take ths other step n the course of sn, n order that the frst sn mght be covered up. And was there no thought or fear that the eye of God saw and knew? Y'ea, there cams the fleetng remembrance and then the cloud of sn n whch tbe 'heart was enveloped settled down ; agan, and Davd,'Steelng bs heart unversty sad should havs gradustsd n /04, but left n 'Ot. Whle beug shown through the *ew Press buldng n Grand Rapds by Edmund W, Booth, manager of the paper, Mrs. Margaret Arborgast, of Coral, fell down the rear stars of the buldng, sufferng a blood clot on th«bran, from the effects of whch she ded Frday evenng at 6 o'clock. Mrs* Arborsas was 52 years old and s survved by eght grown chldren. She was the guest of her son, J. H. Arborgast. An engne cab full of water and steara and the tran crew surrounded by,a lot of rate farmers, s what followed when a north-bound L. S. A f. S. passenger tran struck a flock of chckens so^n after leavng Three Rvers Frday afternoon. One chcken* went through the cab wndow" and broke the water guage and the cab tlted wth steam and water, but the aganst God and the better prompt- engneer and freman escaped njury. T H E Jngs, plunged on n bs evl course. No. Urah must ds. The tran was delayed half an hour. When tranmen essayed to extn- The decson had been made, he.sush an ncpent blaze whch broke message wrtten and even now Urah was bearng hs death warrant to w,<< «<«««. : Typewrters!. -..,,,..,. - -,,., , 1,, --. ^, - 1 ^ 50 per Cent can be saved on any make of machne. Practcally nevr machnes at from '$15 to $50. See us before paycgr manufacturer's prce. Old machnes bought Johnson's Typewrter Exchange, JOURNAL BULDNG, CORUNNA, TH ferce determnaton Davd sealed the letter he had been nscrbng on the roll of parchment before hm, and turnng sharply upon the man standng near, he sad: "Delver ths nto the hand of.loab, captan of the hosts of srael. Deay not." There was harshness almost of enmty n the voce of the kng as be spoke, so much n contrast to the famlar, patronzng manner n whtcu he had greeted hm on the day before that Urah started vsbly. He hestated as he placed the parchment wthn the folds of hs robe, and the kng, n evdent rrtaton, sad. sharply: "That s all!" Wth solderly dgnty and precson Urah bowed low and strode f?c7, the apartment wthout a word. He had wondered at the strange nterest and solctude whch the kng had manfested n hm snce hs eomf r.,7 n answer to the summons several ' days before, and now he wondered even more at the ^ma^encss and surlness so planly manfest toward hm. But he was p'^d to be of and away, and he soon.: ot the matter n hs eagonv^s to l>.. back n the thck of the fght a.'j^nst the stronghold of Rabbuh. The kng, on the other hand, sat slen* and alone, hs face dstorted and beclouded by the evl passons that flamed wthn, Joab. Anxous days followed, but Davd knew that Joab would not fal hm. t was not raany days after ths that tdngs came of a dsastrous defeat to tbe army of srael. The battle had been pressed to the very wals of the stronghold of Rabbah, and many of the sraeltes had fallen was sad news to the naton, and there was mournng n many a household, but Davd, who receved the tdngs from the lps of Joab's messenger, cared not for ths thng, when the messenger added: "And Urah, the Httlte, s dead, also." out whea 13 freght cars on the Soo lne went nto the dtch, 15 mles west of Manstque. they evdently ddn't know the propertes of calcum carbde, wth whch the cars were loaded. Wth the frst dash of waer the cargo burst out n names and nne cars burned. The Soo lne s havng ts troubles n bunches. The roundhouse at Trout Lake burned, the secton house at Engadne shared a lke fate jj jand the Ug wafer tank at Gladstone collapsed, al wthn a few hours. Heavy Penalty for Murder. Wrong-doers n Chna brng msfortune on all tber relatves. Not long ago a man murdered Gov. An Mn of Anthn. The murderer hmself was caught and. beheaded and now the law demands that hs female relatves 16 years old and above be decaptated and that hs male relatves younger than that be compelled to serve n the mperal palace. The ancestral graves of the rebel are also to suffer. The tombs are to be razed and despoled and the bones and dust wthn scattered to the four wnds. Tt s ho.^d, however, that the authortes wll not exact the full penalty of the law. Cure for Snake Btes. nda's government has made Ready Made Cty. Wth a ste of 400 acres, a water works system already nstalled, streets cut and graded and sdewalks lad, the town of Gwnn, near the Swanzy range of ron ore mnes, has not yet a sngle nhabtant. Nor wll t have a permanent resdent untl the houses have been entrely completed, schools bult and every faclty for mantanng a small but up-to-date cty astalled. When a man's wfe goes away for a month's vst the chances are that he enjoys t as much as she does. The supreme court affrmed Judgment for S obtaned by Wllam Culver for the loss of both legs aganst the Fdtllty & Depost Co. of Mary* land, whch was en the surety bond of the South Haven & Eastern" ralroad. T. W. Beam, a Lawton mlar, be came entangled n ;:-. mac.:u u / ; E. Beam & Sor's fr,,..--.,.,,m '..-,,' whle beng whrlej a.>mu a "amu' had every partcle of hs clothng, save hs shoes, torn oft. h e :s bady njured. To test the consttutonalty of the juvenle act, Prosecutor McDonald of Grand Rapds, wll ask the supreme MCH O AN. Only Natonal Bank o the County mesa*: Present,.. LUTHBR LOUCK» Vl«Pre*..... K. P, LBLAKD»«*c. Vce Pre*.,. HEO. HhCCKS CMher,... j, D. LEXAKO *»'tc*»her,. J. * VABA4TKB DKBCTOB*: ^Ster Loucks, Hark D. Geer, F"r*o C. Gal* 0*0. Brook*. Nonn*n p. Lelaod, Cwaua 8, K**4, Em*r F. Ausrsfcurr, Joh r. Buon. J. D. Leanrf, 3e*tly W. Calkns, C. Elford Shermjuo. A SvncraJ Bankng *nfl Foregn E m bu» busness transacted. Cou>cr.toa«wll receve prompt»nd caref o attenton at moderate rates. Ccodncte; a 8*v(B(rs Department to vfe'el* s*ee»> attenton» grea. Your patronage * -oleted..* per cent nterest ou lme Deposts. 60 YEARS' EXPERENCE TRADE MARKS Derms COPYRKUfTS Ac Anyone sendng a sketch and dawalntkm mr faethor ' suroonfl _ laodkrjjely DnMrmb tatkm of any acmntt sf^lssj r l^s tlw ',1 evlatfcm of any «*an^ femaat. TOTBTSSTZ year fonrmontha,sl. SoldEvaB newse-erc SUWaatBt 3n,C Book Bndng. \ rangements to supply the snake-bte court for a wrt of mandamus to comlancet to all polce statons convenent j pe V ; e au tqor *tes of the ndustral school to accept those sent under the juvenle act. to those localtes where venomous snakes most abound. The lttle lancet has proved a great success and haa been the means of savng many lvea. New Collegate Char. A Spansh college has a char of automobln: A break n an engne throttle suddenly started t, throwng Engneer Benjamn Burke, of Port Huron, to the ground and badly njurng hm. t then crashed nto a strng of freght cars kllng 10 steers and releasng others' whch roamed about the ctv untl Catured. ' '. *» We *re n a poston to take your order for any knd of book bndng. Have the magaznes, sheet musc, etc., bound n handsome books at very small cost. Coronaa Journal, *

3 m "PP w. 1 *. *, * * ' WHPff ' Pfs^m ' 111 '>>. FRE NSURANCE ANB REAL ESTATE Place your fre nsurance busness wth Arthur C. Young who represents the best of Companes. These compknes pay ther losses promptly and satsfactorly. ~... ( -' ' ~ ~ T -. - : / have an ewer "roo.n, two story, frame dwellng arranged for two famly's wth barn n the Cty of Flnt, pleasantly stuated opposte Brown Hall' Bldnjr, at 1012 W. Court St.,-whch must be dsposed of at once. Lot s 66 by. 140 ft. REAL ESTATE HANDLED. MONEY TO LOAN. Arthur C.Young OOBTJNN, MCHGAN. YXXXl KDNEY-- «BACKACHE L Bladder and 2&L Your to take the CURE!,. <'! PEEPNG TOR! SCALDED AND NErtfLY Da OWNED CULPRT DETECTED CRAWLNG UNDER BATHHOUSE RECEVES ROUGH TREATMENT. New York. Mrs, Harvey Bowen sav a well-dressed nan, apparently about 25 years old, crawlng about beneath the bathhouse at the foot of Twenteth street, Coney sland. Leavng the bathhouse wthout alarmng hm, she armed he : -self wth a pal of scaldng hot water. n a few mnutes she heard the man crawlng about under the compartment she was n. Wthout warnng she poured the steamng hot water over the head, face and shoulders of the "Peepng Tom/' Hs yells of pan-quckly brought a great crowd of women bathers about th pavlon, Mrs. Bowen shouted Twenty or More Women Joned n Duckng Hm. that th«man screamng and strugglng n the sand and almost blnded by the hot water was a "Peepng Tom." - Whle the women were tryng to locate hm the man wrggled out from beneath the bathhouse and ran across the beach n an effort to escape. A score of the women bathers, unhampered by long skrts, rah after hm and easly captured hm. "Let's drown hot" one excted woman screamed., ' Ths seemed to be the wsh of <all the other woman and the man was dragged, yellng and strugglng, to the beach. He struck,, at the women who were holdng hm, but qnly angered them the more. He wa quckly overpowered and dragged nto the water. Twenty or more women joned la duckng hm. The man yelled for help, but each tme be opened hs mouth he.was shoved under water agan. Exhausted by hs own struggles and the repeated duckngs he had receved, the man qut fghtng and was shoved, pushed and beaten about n the water by the women. The husbands of several.'of. the women'became'alarmed when, he stopped strugglng and rushed out and dragged ther wres away. Scarcely able to breathe, the man was hauled up oft the beach. Whle lyng on the sand and tryng to regan hs breath the man was repeatedly attacked by the women bathers, who even then dd not beleye he had, been suffcently punshed. t was some tme before Coney's frst peeper of the season was able to walk away. GOES TO BED WTH A CORPSE. RCH GRL ELOPES FVE MEN AND A BG GREEN AUTO NVOLVED N GOTHAM LOVE AFFA.?. MOTHER RECEVES A WARNNG Young Woman Starts for Church wth Parent, Hears Sgnal,. Kcks Off Shoes, Vaults Fence and s Hurred Away. New York. Polcemen, fremen, sons of mllonares','a' tarm-hand for H. McK. Twombly, a par of hgh-heeled shoes, a bg green-boded automoble, loud cres and a frantc mother were all nvolved u the elopement of Mss Agnes McMullen, of Smna Hal, a fashonable apartment house on One Hundred and Twenty-second street. Central offce men and the polce of the entre cty are now huntng for the green car n whch Agues eloped wth the farm-hand, Tm Dervn, and four sons of mllonares. Mss McMullen s one of twe daughters of Mrs. Jane Roxbury, wth whom she lved n a luxurously apponted apartment n Stoma Hall, She met Tm Dervu at Summt, N. J., several months ago. He was workng on the estate of H, McK._ wombly at Short Hlls. He s sad to be an eccentrc young man, who hres hmself out hv spectacular fashon, though he has a large fortune. All of bs frends are young sona of mllonares. The other nght a woman telephoned to Mrs. Roxbury and sad: "Look out for your daughter. She s gong to elope wth a farm-hand. He wn come m an automoble." When Agnes arrved Lome her mother charged her wth plannng to elope. The grl dened t Her mother felt that prayer would do the grt a lot of good, and suggested that they go to church next mornng for early mass. '. _.'-..'. the grl prepared an elaborate tolet and was n sprghtly mocd when her mother sgnfed that she was ready to go. Hand n hand the mother and daughter proceeded west on One Hundred and Twenty-second.street. Suddenly a shrll whstle rang out across lots. Agnes glanced over her shoulder and saw the body, of the green car near the corner of One Hundred and Twenty-thrd and Broadway. t had been watng there snce sx o'clock wth engnes poundng aad exhaust throbbng, burnng up gasolne lke an ol-fed foundry. * "Oh, mother, darlng, gpod-by," exclamed the grl, wrappng her mother n a swft, stranglng embrace. Then she broke away and sprang across the street, kckng off her hgh-heeled ahoes as she went. She neatly vaulted a low fence and skmmed oyer the PASSNG OF THE ROUND-UP. Ralroads Reachng nto Cattle Country Wll End Pcturesquenes*.. That most pcturesque feature of cattle rasng on the western plans, the great "round up," wll soon be among the thngs of the past. The ralroads are stretchng ther long lnes through the very heart of the range country and n place of the termnal staton at whch thousands of cattle were gathered from the surroundng country to be shpped to eastern markets there wll be many statons at convenent dstances and wthn easy reach of the dmnshng herds that stll crop fatness from the buffalo grass. The range "r'o-md up" was always a thrllng -sght, Cattle by tens of thousands were sought out from the hlls and valleys by,scores of ranre rders, those bearng brands to. be cut out n herds by themselves. There were many days of hard work for the cowboys, followed by many other days and nghts of drnkng and carousng, whch lasted untl the last tran started on ts eastern way. The great range s rapdly passng and n ts place s comng the fenced pasture of the small farm. Ths change s gradual, but rapd. Thousands of range cattle are now sent to the corn states every year to be fat* tened for market, but wth the development and settlement of the great range country the grass-fed steer wll scon be a curosty n the large stock yards. HE'LL STCK TO HS PPE. One Man, at Least, Has the Courage of Hs Convctons. One partcular objecton many ol the men patrons have to the bljg palatal hotels n the ctes s that they can't smoke ther favorte ppes n the publc halls wthout becomng the cynosure of all eyes. "The other evenng,'' sad a guest at the St Regs, " sat down n one of the comfortable armchars n the hall to enjoy my old ppe that's been my constant frend for the last seven years, There were several people sttng near me most of whom were men, and one or two were smokng cgars or clgarets. ddn't see a ppe n sght anywhere, and that made me a lttle uncertan as to whether should be_ volatng an etlquettal rule of the house. drew oat my brar and, after T had got t gong comfortably. notced that the guests near me began to melt away by ours and twos, untl presently was left wth a good share of the hall to myself. Some of them dd not leave the hal altogether, but moved to seats farthest tmm me. Of course, knew what the cause was, but ddn't care. n my opnon, the man who smokes a plw s a heap sght better than any dozen men who smoke cgar* and cgarettes,"' New nterest n Chemstry. The establshment of pure food com* mssons has nspred many young men to take up the study of chemstry wth a vew to securng a poston on one of those commssons. Scores of men, who already have qualfed for the regular drug store trade are now devotng addtonal tme to the study of extra courses n chemstry. All hope to gan a federal appontment as an expert on pure foods. Not more than one-thrd of the ambtous fellows now mmured n expermental laboratores wul get the poston they are workng for, but the publc wll proft ndrectly by ther present enthusasm because every last one of them wll become more competent druggsts through ther studes of the adulters- Uons of foods. r"s±* * EXCURSONS TO Jamestown Exposton NORFOLK, VRGNA Aprl 19 to November 30 VAROUS ROUTES LAST SUNDAY EXCURSON Grand Trunk last Sunday excurson to Detrot, Sagnaw and Bay Cty, October 13. Kare for round.trp.:.detrot* $1.15; Sagnaw and Bay Cty,_75 cent*, Tmln leaves Coruma at 9:04. " BASE BALL EXCURSONS Base ball excursons to Detrot, Thursday and Frday o{ ths week. Tran leaves Cotusw% at 9:12: fare tor round trp* fl.50. Wll retttrn n evenng by specal tran. Tckets good only for day of sale. ANNT7AL EXCURSON TO CHCAGO Va Grand Trunk Ralway Py a tern Extremely low fares to Chcago and ret&ra on all trans, Too rsday. October 24. UW7. Return lmt October 28,1907. For fares ana farther partculars consult local agent or wrte to Geo. W. Van*, A. G. P. AT. A., Chcago, 111. For any further nformaton regardng excursons or other matter, apply to G. D. Cortmtm MlcHgan Subscrbe for the Journal fx,j '*''' Oo-<rf-r»r*" -wth a STEVEN5- best tlng tot a jjtownkboy! L<~rnn<T Co shoot well a«d c^"''.r;r.;f qualtes of SELF»CONT? -!CU DECSON, ANDJ MANUNESS! ut-01 do«tostt-v-cnfs J;!:A;^S E^CCATON'. J ^s!: your Dealer for Stevens Wles ' slkttfns Pstols, nsst on our tmehonored make. f you cannot obtan, w,, shj* drect* r.xmyy prepad, upon rt'vclpt of Catalog J*r».o. KvraTthf.'f y; *,-»',{ * -!;.;,TV ulrfmttl5stkve.<:> ; foc»4 n *.' a;.'fl ll'-.m;-! Catalog. M»lk-^ fr f«.r C-nM n sfjrrrj* to Jo/ poptjre. Bokntftj T<» 0H>1«? Hwgsr fta«drcor*ton far yt>nr J. STEVLNS AU.^S & TOOL CO. P. 0. Box 4G97 Cbcope* J%U«, MM., U.S.A, Clerk's Mstake Causes Sensaton n a Kentucky Hotel. Juncton Cty, Ky. Maj. James Morton, edtor of the Hardaman Free Press, unwttngly went to bed wth a corpse here the other nght He had mssed hs tran, and gong nto the hotel asked for a room. The clerk sad the house was crowded, but assgned the edtor to a room wth another man. By mstake the clerk sfcnt hm nto the wrong room, and the edtor quetly dsrobed and got nto bed. Soon a young man and a woman came n and took seats near an open wndow. The major thought the procedure str-j.nge, b'jt sad nothng. Lstenng to what they sad, he he=\rd a remark about sttng up wth the dead. Then he remembered that hs bedmale had not moved, and reachng over touched hs bond. Wth a yell the major jumped up wth the sheet over hm and rushed out of the room. Belevng that tha corpse had come to H f e, the two watchers broke for another door, and all met n the offce of the bote] for explanatons. Cast Votes n Coffn Box. Lousvlle, Ky. Votng n coffn boxes and stampng the cross on the upturned ends of coffns was the manler -.,. whch the voter? of K«st Emnence asserted ther rght of smynvve the other day, the occason >.;>^ the Democratc legslatve prmary, whch was held n all precncss of Henry county. At J*>.s( Emnence the votng place was the undertaker shop conducted by H. farrs. On a chld's casket e? ch voter ndcated hs preference wth a stamp. The canddates were a preacher, doctors, and a farmer. The somber surroundoqs worked to the advantage of the mnster, who won a a walk. He dd not solct a vote. Englsh Prmtve Methodsts, The prmtve Methodsts of England have 3,169 mnsters, who care tor 211,64$ members. Sx Arms Reached Out and Agnes nto the Auto. Pulled stubble of the vacant area before her parent could catch her breath. Then the cres of Mrs. Roxbury woke the stllness of the mornng. She called for polce and dremen, add fnally got nto swft moton, followed by a gang of laborers from a bg apartment house n the course of constructon. She led them across lots and to the corner, where she had seen the green automoble a moment, before. Two fremen had been standng on th,* corner, and when they saw the slpperless grl bound out of the lot and sprng toward the machne wth outstretched arms tley ran to the car. There were three fancly clad young men n the tonneau and one at the wheel. Sx arms reached out an 1 pulled Agnes nto the automoble. A good-lookng 'red-hatred youth sad to the fremen: "t's all rght. am gong to marry her." Then the drver threw open the throttle and the bg motor sld along the asphalt, breakng all the speed laws on the statute book. By the tme the fond mother emerged from the lot the car was shootng up the nclne toward Rversde drue. Mrs. Roxbury was puffng and blowng and stuck wth brambles and burrs. But she lost no tme n gettng to a corner drug store and callng up the polce. Of No mportance. Younghub (at the lawn fete) Who s that young roan you have been chattng wth all the evenng, my dear? Mrs. Younghub Oh, he sn't anybody of ay consequence merely one of the fellows used to be engaged to. Chcago News. Bellng a Rat You have probably read ot heard that the best way to rd a house of rats s to catch one and fasten a bell about ts neck, A boy n Delaware tred the experment two months ago, He was badly btten n makng the bell fast, but he turned the rat loose and expected the tnklng of that bell would have great results. t dd have. n the frst place, the rat who wore t waa constantly on the move all nght, and the tnklng bell kept the famly awake, and n the nest the sounds brought scores of new rats to the house. nstead of beng afrad of the bell, they were charmed wth the musc. Had the boy ted a harmonca to another rat's tal, the.odents would have had a dance every nght, A Perpatetc nvestment. When the scallop s full grown ft s able to swm wth great rapdty by openng and closng the valves of ts shell. Ths curous fact, says What to Eat, was unknown to an unfortunate Frenchman who undertook a few years ago to establsh h scallop pjantaton on a quet New England beach. He deposted several thousand scallops n shallow water, expectng them to breed, but when he looked for them the next day all of them had fled. A Dfference of Extremes. Some one wrote n a paper that a cure for fatgue after a bard day was to hold the feet n mustard water for ten mnutes, but, readng hastly, the lady read, "hold the face' n mustard water for ten mnutes." She tred t, but dd not contnue the cure lor ten mnutes by any means, and she dd not go shoppng for several days afterwards. A Cyncal nstructor. "Father," sad lttle Rollo, "what s t a great man?" "A great man, my son. s one who manages to gather about hm a corps of assstants who wh take the blame for hs mstake* whte ns gets the credt lor any good deas." 1 EVERYTHNG FOR PCTURE MAKNG N THE Kodak Box A No, 2 Browne Camera for takng 2# x 3# pctures, a Browne Developng Box for developng the negatves n daylght. Flm, Velox paper, Chem'cals, Trays, Mounts. Everythng needed for makng pctures s ncluded n ths complete lttle outft. And the workng of t s so smple that anybody can get good results from the & 'art. No dark-room s needed and every step s explaned n the llustrated nstructon book that accompanes every outft. Made by Kodak workmen n the Kodak factory that tells the story of the qualty. THE.KODAK BOX No. 2, CONTANNG: l No. 2 Browne Camera, S.O0 Xo.2BrownePrmtmgFrtoft. S M Browne Developng Box, 1.00 Doe. SJ x SV4 BrowuWVelox, OS 1 ull Ko.'(. xu-owne Flm,ft ex.,.20 Eastman M. Q. Developng Tttbw, JO 2 B^-own Developng Powders,.05 3 Paj>w Dereopag Tray*. - JSH 1 Pkg. Eodfck Acu Foxng Pov-uer,,15 1 Doz. 2½ x 8¾ Duplex Mounts, JOR Four-oat. Graduate, ' * DOT. Kodak Dry MoantcgTteSM, M 1 Strrng Bod,....,05 nstructon Book,. -. M $4.^ Prce, Complete At all Kodak Dealers. $4.<» Wrt* for B00UC ttf the Kodak Box. EASTMAN KODAK CO. Rochester, N. Y., r *»* * c** M *»t <- &F.?>'"; ^

4 %mmm W^WM^WUM^k w^&wwffw* m g?^^*mm*?*mm*mmm. Sp^JPvf mmmmm W :. LJpp!^ffjp l^^»'-, 7^ l;^, 1 rr r S. : *. fe.* P? f:' f w 'Rheumatsm of tbe consttutonal dseases t tself n local aches and pans, Jont* mod stff muscles, but t be eared by local applcatons. t requres consttutonal treatment, and best s a course or tbe great blood purfyng and tonc medcne Hood's Sarsaparlla Whch neutralzes the acdty of the blood ana bulds ap the whole system. n nans' lqud form or n chocolated tablet* known as Saraataba. 100 doses $1. THE: CORUNNA JOURNAL, WXXOH & JOSNSON, Propretor*. Fublahed every Thursday mora-r» c>v raaaa, the county se;t of Shawtss't 4 ( otufy Devoted to tho nterests of tu«uepub<-;uv Party aad the collecton of #efera.l WDU oo,-» Taau: <5t.00pe> year n. wj^aufle- Subscrbers who wsh to stop fbe pwper Should notfy as drect, &a4 uot Wave U to the SanlmH tn rln He sometme- forgets Al w*ya see that your su bse r pton.v p.< d up to tbe date yoa request us to stop the puper. The quantty and qualty of *he advertsng appearng (n the JOUKNA. s abundant testta ts value as a*j advertsng roedun sta4e known at* ne offce. of newa are always acceptable. Re >th*t what ntereeh yon wll generally otb.e-6, and that t wll be gladly re- ealveabyua- fleusury <UN7, OCTOBER 1«, 1991, T8 SAYE TBE BEA CROP of Jobbers* Assetatsa HSnds Oat Advce te Farmers* Secretary 6. F. Allmeodnger of the luchlgturbearj tobbers assocaton, has xewsed the fouowg bulletn to the farmer* of the state oh tbe care of 'ther crop: - " "Tb* almost unprecedented weather wbteb has prevaled durng September threaten* to ran a very large part of the bean crop of tle state of Mchgan especally f t contnues logger. The crop last.year amounted to more than f 1-4 mllons of bosher, the crop ths year t probably of equal extent. These "beans are worth today, as tbey come from tbe farmer,»1.55, at least, for tbe beat grades; at ths rate the crop o toe state baa a value of approx- nanely,000,000. **T1e freather condtons beng so {, f ths crop be saved, unusual most be taken rot ts preservetto.snd a* tbe amount nvolved s so worthy of specal c*ort, ths letter t wrtten wth» vsw of makng one or faro anggettona tor tbe care of the 4 *Oo almost every farm there s abed Soeasand bft room whch could be owed n an emergency for handlng part of tbe beans n the straw. They be repeatedly tensed and on, days fven the full beneft of be tan. f tbe fanners would uae tba spa«e to tbe utmost a great many tfeoneand bushels may be saved. 4( A almost every town n the state there are one or more apple evaporators; because of the falure of the apple crop these are not n use ths year. Where th^se evaporators are n tbe form of klos they could be used for tbe purpose of dryng beans n tbe straw. A kln would bold a wagor> load of beans n the straw. Frequently the«e are sx or eght of these klns n tbe proup: n ths case t would take tut a few hours to care fur tbe product of a large farm, when t>he klns could be used to care for stll Other bean crops. One cauton only would be necessaay, the beat appled moat not be extreme. The farmers of the state may be somewhat slow to start off c a new metbod of curnk ths crop, but tbe wrter s certan that ths method s eutrely feasble, and that large amounts of the beans of t^e state could be quckly and tbomly cured." Marrage Lcenses. Han v F Dorto. Ol-ago...: 2f S<lna V. Y-*ung. 0*'OPPO 20 John K. Bmw. Owoatn> 25 Clara K. Beebr, Owo««o...,. *) Fne Care Fne Har t's fne care that makes fne har! Use Ayer's Har Vgor, aew mproved formula, systematcally, conscentously, aad you wll get results. We kaov t stops fallng har, cures dandruff, and s a most elegant dressng. Entrely new. New bottfo New contents. Dm$mlchange the eofo?o/!f her. A ters than Ac w* h«wy Joraut wth«*oh bow» # Show t to yoa» - doctor A*& hm tbont t. Ayer*a Har Vgor, as now made from our aew mproved formula, s the latest, most scentfc, and n every way tbe very best har preparaton ever placed opon the vaarket. For fallng har and dandruff t 1» the one great medcne, > *# ta«*. c. ay«r co>, ^weu.: Boe-Hoo Few*....-» la the ntense beat the young oap. «-pf«smled. Ths recall! to my mnd.** he stley "boe-hoo fever." "Boo-hoo fever? What la thatr "t tea fever brought on by the heat among our solders n the Phlppne*. A md Cever, t becomes hgh and actve only when the weather grows unusually hot. Then t throw* our young men nto a strange delrrurn. They cry and weep. They boo-hoo. "f you should go nto one of our hosptal ward" n the Phlppnes on a, very hot day, the oud wals of the young fever patents would»oon show you the orgn of boo-hoo ferer's funny -name." FAR EXCHANGE A New B&cc for an Old One How t s Bone n Mchgan. Tbe back aches at tmes rath a dull ndescrbable feelng, makng you weary and,'.restless, Jpercng pans soot across tbe regon of the kdneys, and agan tbe lons are so lame to stoop s agony. No use to rub or apply a plaster to the back n ths condton. You cannot reach the cause. Exchange the bad back for a new and stronger one. Follow the example of ths Mchgan ctzen: Mrs. J. W. JRyan, lvng at 1709 Seventh $t., Port Huron, Mteu., Bars; " can speak very favorably of Doan's Kdney Plls as 1have used them n my famly for at least fve years and they have never faled to gve relef when called upon to do so. My husband has been a sufferer from kdney complant for years. Hs back was very lame and sore and tbe kdneys were weak and f be caught cold t always settled n bs kdneys and caused hm much pan and sufferng. Often he was so bad be could not st or He n one peston and when attacked n tbs way be always^appealed to Doan's Kdoey; Plls and obtaned certan and lastng relef. One of our daughters had an attack of backache last summer and Poau's Kdney Plls also cured her. We all bold a very hgh opnon of Dean's Kdney Plls." For sale by all dealers. Prce 60 cents. Foster M Jlbarn Co., Baffala New York, Sole Agents for the Unted States. Remember tbe name Doan's and take no other. =z THAT TOL NTBaST YOU Regster Cols was n Bancroft Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Hofb bocm agan. Wlffler are -John Oraee] sold 1100 western sheep Frday. Mra. W. C. Home returned from Bay Vew Frday. Mrs. Dr. N'orrU la vstng n Morrce and vcnty. <'bas. Lews, of Langsbtrg, was n the cty Monday. Ben Grant s tbe new agent at tbe Aon Arbor staton. /lepublcao county cenventon at court house today. Board of puperveors cocomenue bu9kte«8 next Monday. A. C. Marshall, son of B. R Marshall, was very ll yesterday. ~Mrts- VToo^hama left Monday for Mansvlle, N. Y., for a bref vat. -Your attentloa s caled to te at 1, of A. W. Curts & Co. n ths eaue. Mr. and Mr*. Ezra Locgentertaard frleodf from Detrot tbe past week. Robert Parknson s buldng a new bouse on bs farm near Jndds Corners. Tbe Coraona hgh school foot ball team play wth Holly at Holly Saturday. Dr. A. G. Cowle and Banker J. D. Lelflnd, of Duraud, w«re n tbe cty yesterday. Mr. and Mr?. J. C. Scbnltz left yesterday for a vat wth bs parents n Oho. Mr. and Mrs. F,. Basbrook returned tome yesterday from tber vst n luos. Chaa. H. Bennett, of Byron, and Edtor zor, of Durand, were n tbe cly Saturday. Fred E Kelsey, of Carson Cty, called on hs sster, Mss K. E. Kelsey, Saturday. Grand Trunk excurson to Detrot Thursday and Frday. Rate for round trp D. M. Lowe pold a pano to J. B. Wallace last week. He s havng good salt* of panos. Claude Muzzy, who has been very tl wltb typhod fever, was reported a lttle better yesterday. A large number of fans from our cty wll attend tbe World's base ball ' t seres at Detrot tba week. The oldest so«of Danel Merrel«, of 1 Vence, broke bs arm last week whle playng on the school house ground. D. M. Lowe w>jd a pao to Forrest Perry last week. He s hasdjug a nue! pano and thn make*fr teen that he has sold wtbu a short tme. MONEY DEPOSTED H THE SAVNGS DCHAJTMCNT Of Tr* CTZENS' SAVNGS BANK OF 0W0SS0 ON OR BEFORE OCT. Sth, 1907 WLL DRAW :4s- NTEREST L B^ea^tf^s^pVaja^rfhjrh^MaMh^^Ba^^Wh^Hne^jS^^f^e^pHl f Left Three Montls J Mss Mabel Mack, teacher of pano, at Judge Bush's on Wednesdays. Phone 394 3r., Owoa?o. 39-tf Mrs. Frances E. Peter, of Grants Pass, Oregon, and Mrs. W. H. Smm»n», of Mason, are vstng relatves n Corunna, A. L. Chandler has been very sue* oeesf«1 wth bs cases at tbe present term of court havng won them all except one. The councl apponted B. R. Marshall engneer at the waterworks plant for whch the councl t to be commended. K. P. Janes, travelng eatoaman for the U. S. Robe Co., s hoaae for a abort Uae. He has been very suceeeafal n makng teles. The examlnatoa of Charles E. Wa^was held n Detrot last Week and was bound oyer for tral oh tbe charge of manslaughter. Sam Kerby get up a box of cgars to the local fans Monday fr honor of tbe Tgers great vctory. Sherff Watson passed them around. D. W. Kelley, of St. Clar, was here Monday and Tuesday on busness and vstng old frends, He was a former resdent of our cty. Wlford Cassdy rell from a hckory tree whle gatherng ants last week sad broke one bone of hs leg below tbe knee. Dr. Walter Parker reduced the fracture. Ruth Porter, of Kew Lotbrop, was hart whle at pty at the school ground Thursday, the oooe of one of her wrsts beng crocked. t s not tfcoagbt ^e njury mll prore seroas. Col. and Mrs: Geo. A. Parker attended * meetng of the Sbawaaso* Couney Battalon held here yesterday, Mr. and Mrs. Parter expect to leave soon for Alabama to spend the wnter.. Judge and Mrs. Bash returned home frotn tber trp to Jamestown Exposton, Washngton and hs old home near tbe Cart kll mountans. They report pleasant journey and a happy tme. Bancroft: M. V. B. VVxom s stll crtcally ll at tbe home of bs son. R. P. n Detrot Hs mnd s falng hm as well as hs body. Mrs. Wlxom who has ale^ been crtcally ll, s couvaleso-' ng. Mrs. Harley Barnes and her three chldren baye returned to Byron after two years' stay n Vrgna. She wll vst frends there for a abort tme, then go to Flnt where tbey make t tber borne. Last Sunday evenng, whle Mr. Tarvoll, of New Hsven, was comng home from Henderson h* horse became frghtened and ran array breakng tbe huggy. Mr. Tarvoll receved a few bru.es. Now s the tme to buy your new furnture and there s no better place n the county for a good bargan than at tbe furnture etore of A. W, Curts A Co., of ths cty. Call and look tber stock over. Owosso Tmes: A. F. Loom's and A. E. Osroer, both of ths cty, have purchased the grocery busness of E. L. Devereaux. Tbe members of tbe new frm are both experenced men n tbs lne and wll no doubt be successful n ter venture. Mr. Devereaux expects to go west shortly and wll probably locate for busness on tbe Pacnc coast. Chaa. E, Rprley, A. D. Whpple, Presdent Caaher Chaa. W. Oale, Geo. H. Sweet, Vce Presdent Ass't. Casher THB Owosso Savngs Bank Owowo, Mlchlsron Cetpltol, - $100,00.00 Pave ^ - * s* yl *K* lajo ^ f o Deposts DRECTORS: W. B. ^amburn W. M. Klpatrlck K. T. Ddloy Geo. T. Mas»>u J Chaa. W. Gale Chw. K. Eley W. A. Woodard Mr. and Mrs. Katftmaa, of Montrose, were guests of Mr, and Mrs. J. H. West tbe forepart of the week. TLey were old neghbors of Mr.and Mrs- West and leave la a few days for Loolaao* to spend tbe wnter. L. G. Cudney left a be^t. a eoramon gtrdeo red beet, n our offce Tuesday that weghed fourteen po'uds and two ouncea. t wll last our famly for gome tme. Can any one beat ths beet? Thanks Mr. Cudney. Perry: A letter receved by Mr.and Mrs. C, H. R"hrabacber from Mr. and Mrs A. D. Hamlton who moved from ths place to Pecan, Msa., two ytars ago, announces the arrval of a lttle daughter at ther home, Sept, 25. Holly Herald: The Corunna hgh school foot ball eleven wll me.?r, the Holly b«h school teaa at Patterson feld on Saturday afternoon of ths week. Ths wlt he a fast game as the two teams are about evenly balanced. At the sesson of the grand lodge Kuxhts of Pythas, held n Bay Cty hut week. ra G. Curry, ot Owosso, was advanced to the offce of vce grand chancellor. Owosso Knlghta apprecate the honor whch tbs promoton brng* to Mr. Curry. For sale: A small flock of throughbred barred Plymouth rocks, one repeatng rfle, one Merln,22 repeatng rfle, one Wnchester.22 repeatng rfle, two double barrel shotguns, one double F. L. John berrel bam merles* shotgun. son. Corunna. Mr. aad Mrs. Geo. Augustus Haven, of Atoo, N. Y,'announce the marrage of ther daacjuer, Sarah Rata, to Mr. Clark Ely Decker, of Battle Creek, Mch. The ceremony took place at the brde's home, Oct.. Mr. Decker was a former Corunna boy. ^Lexngton Hews: LootsN, Sbeardy, edtor of Corunna ndependent, was & guest of the News man over Sunday, Mrs. Sheardy, who has been vstng her parents for the past two weeks, accomoanted by her lttle daughter, returned borne wth blm Monday. The thrd eleven organzed a foot ball team last week by electng Sumner Lyman captan, Howard Pettlbooe monager and Veyoe Martn, treasurer. Tbe boys average about 85 pounds and would lke games wth boys of ther sze. They got a new ball Frday. Morrtee: t pras dlaeovered Saturday that the nfant son of Howard Allex Perry: Mr. and Mra. W. T. Macqaeew, of Cncago, are tl*p^^rt''paw ^ J^:,e f^j^. t?,0 *^ Sunday euta of a baby grt, whch came to glad- Dr. Brancock, -of- Byron, - was called nto dss ther home Thursday. Mr. Macqaesa ws«formerly a Perry boy. eoomluton wth Dr. Shaw and they decded an operaton would save the Uttls ones eye sght. Hugh M. Nchols, who has bee* vstna! hs parsata for a few days, left Monday to Jon bu ablp, the Hew Jer* sat. wbleh, wth others of Unele Sam's shps, wll leave sooo for the Paefle. Before Bogh comes home agan he wll have saled arodnd the world. Fsed Bel*, of Owosso, has the enntract for buldng nne cement pers, four feet square, and eleven feet hgh for tbe foundaton of Sedgwck Dean's mammoth new ol tank near the Grand Trunk depot here. The pers wll extend eght feet above the ground. Rev. Arthur, of Grand Rapds, was a vstor n Corunna Monday and saw the court bouse for tbe frst tme. He bad mucb to say u prase of fbe buld- VSa ng, declarng that t was the best of S5 the county buldngs n Mchgan that «be had seen, eclpsng that"of Kent ^* county and others that be named.!jr Geo. Beemer and famly returned W borne Saturday from a trp to Holly, «rj Colo., also to Colorado Sprngs, Denver ^ g snd other ponts. They found Holly ^9 boomng and were nnable to nod a bouse to lve n. Nearly oue-baf tbe, 8rj populaton were lvng n tents. Corunna people are pleased to welcome Qrl them borne. Tbe annual meetng of the Shawa e - see County Battalon was held at the Grand Army rooms yesterday. There was a large attendance consderng tbe Dad weather n tbe forenoon. Tbe progran* as gven'last week WM practcally carred out. The meetng was addressed by Rey. l^ealle Bower. Jud re Mner and Congressman J. W. Fordney. Durand Express: Mr. Nevlson was born n Durham county, England, August 29th, 1841, After bs frst marrage be came to tbs country, settlng n Canada n tbe sxtes. He was the father of eleven chldren, nce of wbom re lvng, seven sons and two daughters. He came to Mchgan n 1889, and bs wfe ded at Petersburg. He was tn busness n several adjonng townshps. Anally settlng n Durand and engagng fn the harness busness. He was marred to the wfe that survves blm, Mrs. Margsret Reynolds, of Corunna, n 1S96. New Lotbrop Standard: James Mulcaby has on exhbton seven potatoes grown on Frank Morrson's farm that wegh seven pound and one ounce. They came froo> one bll. Mr Mulcaby has an eye to buelness and announces a contest tbe party wbo brngs n seven potatoes contestng wth these to leave the name. A prze wjl be gven to tbe wnner. Wlwu the content s oyer t s expected Mr. Mulcaby wll have hs wnter supply of potatoes n cellar. Speakng of mammoth vegetables, Pat* rck Mulcaby baa a cabbage stalk tbat bas seven fully developed beads on t. Whether chckens or vegetables New Lotbrop beats tbe world. Health tneurarvoe 0ttta O#t CALUMET BAKNG POWDER S.OQO.QO few * rd a <>*««* tc, 1 w "*** ry-nf for any aqb-j stance njurous to the heajth found n Caawuet Bakng Powder. Party s a prme essental n fs>swl Calpmet s made only of pure, wholesome ngredents combned by sklled chemsts,,nd comples wth the pare food laws-*s al states. t s tbe only hjgu-jjrade Bakng Powder oh the market sold at a moderate prce., Calumet Bakng Powder may be 'freely used wth the certanty that food made wth t contans ne> rutmafwl <Rra e t s ebemeally e**reet and makes Pure, WkfteMftae- Food. Henry Launsten. who was brought here from Cbeaanlng, was taken &> Oak throve santarum, Flnt, a prvate asylum, Thursday for treatment by he sons. He was adjudged nsane by Drs. Parker and NorrU. of Cornnna. Mr. Launsten, who s 69 years old, s qt»te volent and bammcred the bars of the cell, Thorvday, wth great monotony and regularty. Mrs. Joseph Serr and daughter have returned from Chcago, where bo Sept. 63 they attended the golden weddng of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Maynard, also the weddng of her daughter, Mss Besse Far, of Bay Cty, to Mr. Ernest Hall, of Chcago, the weddng takng place at tbe golden weddng of her grandparents. Mrs. Serr also vsted Mr. and Mrs. Del Sutton whle n Chcago. :,.;-. *^ «W:T**V- Mor rce: Monday was the 53rd annversary of Henry Alag's blthday^ Hs daogbters, Mrs. *m. Morrce and Mrs. Boy Kryact arranged a sttrpfse for bm at be Utter. As be was gong borne to uupper MrS. Bryant eatled toblm to come u for a moment. He was completely ^rpraed tn and bo famly and the other relatve* there. The company enjoyed to tbe full extant Mr. AUss's swrprlse. Teen he wa* nvted/ to partake ota very aebstantlal sapper. Mr. Alng wll have no occason for COM bands na bta daughters presented bm wth a oee par of gtovea. A very pleasant tme was reported. Ptamz done by Jbe W*tna a always neat VEN DETTA OWOSSO THEATRE FRDAY EVE'NC, OCT. 11 OPPORTUNTY s now knockng at your toot. She has been there before, but has not stayed because your house was not well furnshed to make her comfortable. She has returned to pont out the best tme of the year to buy furnture cheap. That s now n Autumn season. Look A Good Oak Bedroom Sut, $20.00 Oak Sdeboard for ron beds from up Our prces are rght, come n and, see ue. A. W. CURTS & CO. FURNTURE AMD UWtMfJtTAKNC. PHOSf E 2» ^mmmmmmmmwmmnmmmm^ [Sweet Grapes fc We wll have a thousand Baskets m- of Fancy Sweet Grapes n the next Nten days?x> run off at 15c a Basket, or two for 25c. Come and get 'em. s= Another Ton H. & E. Sugar SC Next week, at $!.:& per 25 lb. Sack. J. C QUAYLE 3 Tha Orgnal Cash Qrocsr, 3 fluuuuuuuumuuuuwuuuuuu t JL.:....-,... * -', - J.. '.: *.*.*, SLuL-:*^;^, j^ ^^^11¾^^^ ' " ^ :. : ^., - J,,'. V-W»<?** '.*". '.*?.'nft'j. - js^n K*m00^<v^ r; - ::»!W<*

5 ^fc. """""^^ wmammmmmsm rnmsmsmm^ -¾. r wth J Advce of the largest coffee dealers n the world s always to buy the oldfashoned AxbudeW AROSA Coffee n of de NaboMl Pure Food Uw, Guar*** No Sad at Washngton. ^ y f ^ packages. Don't ask for a pound o* Mocha andjava, or buy py &e prjee, for Coffee fluctuates and you cannot get the same coffee for the same prceall the tme auks you pay too nmch for t Moat of the ac-cased Mocha and Java Coffee s smply maaquecadng, and» not nearly as good coffee for you as ArbuckW AROSA, the blend cf the Bnz a& Coffees most sutable to the taste and heaaw Anerkan people. By the Sookr there» no deference between roasted Java and BnzXan Coffer*; n^2y^eo^e^^^3ra^fan^u ^^y7orjava. The prncpal dfference s that Afbockkss* costs yoo less. t k a ntake to beleve that a hoh pre* guarantees qmfey.' When you buy AbuckW ARJOSA Coffee, you get» fur one pound package of the leadng Coffee of the wotu 2ft sales for 37 yeats are greater than the eosnfasned sates of *l the other packaged coffees. By gvng better Ceftee for ** " r rr \VT~ huh ny Tmr nrr ratg tne combned btfbewes of the four nest largest coffee mm b the whok world. f your dealer ws not sspply the geaune, wrte to ARBUCKLE raoa. Nnr Y«t OK Trade wth Advertsers and Save Money 's Pressed Steel Boats TJLLN'S Pressed Steel Boats are faster* more,durable and afer. Tbey do not crack, leak, dry out or snk. Each boat beng equpped wth ar cfaanfbfrs lke a lfe boat. MaUa's Bow Boats row easer, are cleaner, easy to handle, do not become waterlogged and heavy. MolUn'e Steel UdtorBoats have relable engne noseless under water exhaust. Complete flhtstrated catalogue maled free on request. THE W, H. MULLN'S CO., : " - > "' OHO. '.afl^.f' Don't thnk that ples can't be cured. Thousand* of obstnate eases have been cerer by-ooan's Ontment. 50 cents at any drag store. t s sad tha a Greenvlle mnster who goes to church from lls home n a carrage on Sundays receved an anonymous letter callng attenton to the fact that the Lord never rode to cbuch n a carrage. The mnster read the letter from the pulpt and then sad: "f the wrter wll come to me oext Suttftuy, properly saddled end brdled, 1 wll be glad to follow tbe Lord's example and come to> eburch as he entered the cty of Jerusalem. Blous? Fec heavy ftft/:r dnner? Tongue coated? Btter taste? Complexon tallow? Lver needs wakng up, DoanY Beguet* cure blous attacks. 25 cents at any drug store. rmto*t«al.laxanvc cotton rnros» KB«EDnUXAT1VERO(EY-H8 Moaey n vmmm. tnrent Jon»0 vel a* Urge Send for free booklet. MOo B. Steven* a Co., 9M 14th St, WMhUtgon, D. C. Brsucbe*: Cfecajbo.Clcre^ lud, oebolt. SvtefcUskcd SSfc % - - % - GONG OUT BUSNESS $ worth of Hardware, Tn and Grante Ware, Coal Stoves, Steel Ranges, Bugges, Cutters and Farm mplements gong to be sold AT ACTUAL COST SALE COMMENCES THURSDAY, OCT. 3 RD»*-"», ^ JMu -JV+ and contnues untl entre stock s closed out f you wsh to save retalers' profts come early whle the assortment s good. Pettbone & Fenner -t-f.'-f* THE HORRORS OP WAR. Death Losses of Cvl War Compared * wth Those of Other War*. Tbe ttanc nature of the struggle between the states from 1861 to 1865 s slowly dawnng upon the world. n the annals of warfare t was the most deadly conflct ever known. Self-preservaton, the frst law of nature, compelled the north to put forth ts strength to the lmt of possbltes, whle the south once commtted to the dream of successful rebellon, fought wth the mad courage of desperate resolve. Fcr four years the warfare was unceasng. The ' northern solders suffered severely from the southern clmate and the dseases engendered n an unaccustomed way of lfe as well, whle the klled and wcunded numbered, n the unon army alone, 85, Of these, 109,893 were klled outrght on the feld of battle; 153,720 ded from dseases whle the war was gong on. A death roll of 319,613. Comparng the two great battles, Waterloo and Gettysburg, a mltary wrter draws attenton to the fact that, whle the same number of men were on the feld n these battles.152,- 000 all told, the losses at Gettysburg exceeded the losses at Waterloo, consderng the casualtes to the troopa actually engaged. At Waterloo the losses were 49,485, and at Gettysburg 50,528. t s remembered that 14,000 men (the Sxth corps) were not engaged at Gettysburg except for a abort tme, early on the mornng of July 2. Ths run* up the percentage of losses n the Amercan battle, consderng the number of men engaged. r Throughout the cvl war the loss of lfe on both sdes was frghtful, wrtes Ada C. Sweet, n Chcago Journal Looked at even now, after the lapse of years, the record s dreadful to contemplate. n the unon army there were 75 regments whose losses ran from 60 to 85 per cent The Frst Mnnesota went nto acton at Gettysburg wth 262 offcers and men. t lost 224 klled and wounded. The Twenteth Massachusetts, at Fredercksburg, lost over 8 per cent, of ts membershp, and came out of the fght commanded by a captan who was, n years, a mere boy. Pckett, the confederate general, led 5,000 brave men n hs great charge at Gettysburg, and n 30 mnutes lost n klled, wounded and prsoners, 3,000. The bloodest battle of the cvl war was Antfetam, and the losses were the most appallng n a short space of tme unless we except Gold Harbor, where the unon forces lost 4,000 men n eght mnutes. When we see the veterans n ther parades, or engaged n ther work atom* the ordnary ways of lfe, dstngushed only by the bronse buttons that some of them wear, we do not realze what these men have Cone through. We have all been taught to respect «ud honor them, but t s only when We look at the records of death and devoton whch are wrtten n the books of the naton, but left, for the most part unread, that we rals* what t meant to be one of Uncle Sam's solders n the years from S 61 to t s well to take thought, occasonally, of all the sacrfces that were made that the country mght lve and that we mght exst n peace and prosperty, a free people upon the face of the earth. THE ARMY MULE. Hs Fathful Servces Should Cad Forth Feelng of Grattude. "The thought of the servce the mule rendered n the cvl war ought to endear hm to every lover of our country. The greathearted Lncoln understood hs value. (A good mule was worth $400 then) and the good presdent asked, when told of the fearful slaughter at Antf tarn: 'How many mules were lost? We can get more men, but the mules' places can't be suppled.' "All honor to the mule, 'for the sake of hs noble qualtes, for the sake of ths glorous country whch he helped to save, for the sake of the 4,000,000 slaves whose shackles he helped to kck loose, and tnat have snce haen melted nto plowshares that he has patently drawn all over the south, pullng along wth hm the black man holdng to the handles behnd for all these and other reasons let the mule stand as our natonal emblem n place of the dscredted and predatory eagle. And persh the man who shall attempt to pull hm down as he certanly wll unless he stands afar off.' "The mmortal Garfeld once sad: 1 never meet a boy n the street wthout feelng lke lftng my hat to hm, so great are the wonderful possbltes wrapped up under hs ragged coat' "n common wth mllons of others, feel the same way about the mule. never meet one n the road or pasture wthout rasng my hat f don't he'll rase t. for rae, so great are the possbltes ted up n hs wonderfully constructed hnd legs." Unconscous Labor. "Dd you ever notce these people who work ther faces every sort of way when they are cuttng a pece of meat?" he asked. "Now just look across there at the man at that table j there." "Yes." sad she, as she looked across, "but they are aot a patchng to the old women who open and shut ther mouths as they cut somethng or other wth ther long scssors.'' Attrbutes of a Good Crttc A wse skeptcsm s the frst trbute of a good crtc--lowell, Offerngs NEW UNDERWEAR, ALL STYLES AND PRCES Startng wth the Chldren's fleeced at 12c Startng wth Lades' fleeced at 25c, 37k, 50c Startng wth Lades' Unon Suts at 50c, 1.00, $2,50 Startng wth Men's Shrts at 50c, 98c, doz. Hosery of the best goods n the market. We bought these goods early and wl sell at old prces. We have sold snce we opened our store over 6000 pars of hose. We all want thern. Long Gloves, black and whte... $1.00, 1.50, 2.00 per par 5000 y'ds Best Prnts at.,..! 7c pery'd Butterck Patterns are the best..10c and 15c Begnnng Oct.!5th, ths store wll close every evenng, Mondays and Saturdays excepted, at 6:30. J. E. Carland & Co. THE WDE AWAKE DRY GOODS HOUSE N PRASE OF THE BORE. One Man Rses to Defend an Unpoo*- ar Character. Stevenson has apologzed for the dlers and the theves and the cannbals, bet even that most chartable of men had never a good word to say for the bore; Neltaer n lfe nor n lterature have we ever found a roan hold enough to apeak well of htm; the crook may be forgven, but the bore never ts. Poor devl! How all the world s aganst hm! And yet ths s scarcely nst; for n hs way he s an excellent thng; an honest creature. He s what he s. God made hm a bore; he struggles not aganst hs destny, but a bore he to> mans; there s less of hypocrsy about hm than about other men; he conceals nothng from hs neghbor that nterests hmself; out of the kndness of hs heart he passes on hs own experence; he s generous of hmself; he has a message, and f the hnts of hs bearers should cause hm to abate one syllable ot t he would feel that' he had been false to hs msson " the lttle nsncertes wth whch nor* gnoble men Joljy the hears along are beneath hm. Look at hs motves and you wn sea that he s unjustly used; we kl of us know hm, and w«should treat hm wth mora charty, for upon occason we have all beech*. Don Marqus, la Uncle Rerous's Magazne. SPOLED COURSE OF LOVE. Young Man Msunderstood Answer of Hs Charmer. There was one* a bashful young polceman, whom we wll name George X. T who was n love wth a young lady, but was too backward to propose to her. One nght, however, he plucked up courage and went to her house. After beng seated wth her on the sofa, he sad, "Mary, love you." The young lady, who was. lookng for ths for some tme, dropped her eyes and murmured, "Dtto, George." To her surprse and dsappontment he changed the subject and fnally went away. The next day he was talkng to some brother polcemen at the fence of a large feld of cabbages. "Boys," sad George, "what does dtto mean?" "Why," sad one of them, pontng to a very Jarge cabbage, "do you see that cabbage, George?" "Yes," sad George. "And do you see that one next to t?" " do," sad George. "Well," sad tha other, "that second eabbage-head s dtto to the frst one." "What!" roar ed George, "dd that confounded grl call me a cabbage-head?'" And he went hs way and refused to be comforted. Judge's Lbrary. A Lttle Touch of Nature. A boy of 12, and a woman, aged three tmes 12, sat sde by sde n a Broadway car. They were strangers. The boy's ttle blue jacket was pulled out at the seams, the woman wore a last summer's hat Both were very tred. They sat sdeways and occasonally they nodded drowsly. Once durng a spasmodc cranal movement, ther faces almost touched. Then they braced back and looked at each other. The woman smled. "Are you tred?" she asked. "Awful," sad the boy. Then he smled, too. "Are you?" he asked. "Awful," sad the woman. Then they smled some more, and somehow nether felt qute so Ured after that. New York Press. K OTXCE OF HEARNG CLAMS BEFORE T COURT. State of Mchgan, tbe Probate Court for th* County ot Sh* vwee. n the. matte* of Uw «*t*te of John \ U», dwe»aed. Notce n berel.y?ven tba four monttas from the SU day of October, A- t>. WO?, baw been allowed for credtors to ttreeent fcber clams aganst Rad de**>aae<) to sak Court for exaatdbto^.ntu adjustment, and 'l*t»u credtors of a*k Uvc*-u#<ed are requred to prv SMtt ther vlauu^- U> u^d Court, at th«probate Offce, U tae C'ft* of Cornna, n»a< Countj, cm or before the l^th day of Ffbmary, A. f>. ltq&, and that sad elaa^s wll be beard before sad Court, on Wednesday, the tch day of Fel* m*ry. A. Z>.»08, at ten o'clock n the forenoon, Datld, October»thy A. D MATTHEW BUSH, Jndce of Probate. By Katherne S. Kelsey, Ke^sterof Probate. SHEBr^'S SALE. By vrtue of a wrt of der faca*, ssued oat of and tnder Oft «ea! of the Crcut Court for the County of M»- eomb and State of Mchgan, to me drected and delvered, n favor of Cb«rl«; Chrste eu al. agaast the goods and chattels, lands and tenements of Mlton C Com stock and John Crawford, co-partners^'dong- busness ascomatoek de (Crawford, dd, oa the 27th day of Aprl A. D, )WT, le>v upon and take all the rght, tlo and nterest o! sad Mlon C. Cow stoefe n and to the followng deserbad real estate, stnat d b the County Of ShLawannee and State of Mchgan, to wt: Al of a eertan pteee and parcel of laad fttnated n the-tewttthlp ot Bnroa, County of Shawassee and State of Mchgan, known and descrbed fca The W\«t h*lf (½) of the outbeaat ooe>qbarter (¾) asd the east ball y%\ of the sobthwest one-tttutrter (M» ol scctor twenty-flve S ) '! t m n <S> north of range four (4) east n the CtfmS> ot ttblrwmmee and State of MUAg»a,al1«f waet 1 abal expos* for ante at phhr knetton to th* hgbeat bdder, a* tbe law drect*, at the front dver «rf tbe Court Hove* a toe Cty of Cor- <Uat bclnw the buldng n whch tbe Cnuft Cettrt for **d Conaty of BbtawaH. State of atkbbjao, a held) oa Pataday. the «S# day of Ztovetaber A. D»07, at S o'eloek tm Ukc foreaooa,., JOSK A. WATSOK..''Sherff. Ca»T am» Caanta,L, P. Baron, Mch., Attoroc} a for PlattttJfT*. MOftTOAOB BALft,-Wbereaa, defaolt tu» been Made la the eouduoaa or» eertan a*ort afa aude and executed by Jar> B. Trench and Jula A. Prettc-b, h«we, of Fttwatf. County of <*e»«be*. Stato of Mlcfthyan. «f the Srat part, to Ahatn *. Hlcharrfa, a«exced* UTOfthelaat wll and testament of Caates nnaden, deceased, of Cornnna, 8h'.awa«aea County Mchgan, of the tceotd part, on tue Pthdayof Aprl, A. D. M& wnd reoorded la the tffce of the Regster of Deed* /or Mbla*»#- aee County, 9tate of Mlvhljrwt, n Lber 1 & of MorttfageA. on page 2-7, ou the ttxt day vt Aprl. A. D. 1W6, on wh.-h ^ort^atre there n calmed to be dne at (le dtte of 1Mb notce, fur prncpal aurf nterest, the bum of Nluvl- «-o fnndred anl Kl'Wrtk Dollars and Forty-K;.lt Out*, and n> tu t or proce«jn^h at law <»r n equty havnj. been tak^n to recover the uonrf»w«->rvd l>y wat raortrape, or any part theroof, uot-e n hereby (rver, tha by'vrtue ot the power of nal<e. c-ohuued n mw mu'tgn^e aud tle statute n suvh t-ase Made artd provded, «ad mort^tre wlt be foreclosed by e-»u-r of lc prea.te«descrbed theren, or M><"nH-: tbct-of HA m?*y be necessary to satsfy the xua sum of money now «Jue thereon together wu uteheut thereon at the rate of seven percent, per an bum fvom tbe date of tbn notce, tcpother wth»a attoruey fee of thrty dolp.rs, as provde n sad tuortp;*»se, o- >etlef wth all legal^'costsand ejepeuw' s of ths for^closnre at p ble aucton or vemlue.o be ^htst HUder, at tbe front door of tle <-otrt bour>e n lse cty ot'coucna, Mcnt'g-an, (sad c-^rt house beng'rte bum'ng'1^. tvh^h the trcvu ourt for Shawassee county, Mchgan, s held.l ou the 4tb day uf Jaaua.rj-, A. D. luu&, a.t ten o'clock n the forenoon of sad daj. Tbe premses are drs^rbed n kad luortffa^e as follows tb-wt: \.ox one block wo, D'lrand Land CowpaB.v'a nus- addjcn ( t> the v:lafre of Durutu- "t the crnty of Shawassee, ue state of Mo'cgau. Dated October l>. '9UT. AlSTN'E. RCHARDS. Executor of the la?,t wll and testament of Charles B- U'eeden, deceased. AsTs E. EUHABDB, Atly.forthe'Exec'utcr' j Look at your expraton date We nvte Every parent, young man or woman who s nterested n anyway n bosmn educaton to wrte lor ± m School Shoes a copy of our new Prospectus, t tells you what we do and why our stodents toceccd so well, wrte at once for t. Enter any day or evenng. Detrot Busness Un-! versty, WkoxSt^ Detrot, ; Mkfa. R.L Bennett- CP.A, Prhu, W. F. Jewell, Pre*, t s about tme you were buyng School Shoes. We want to say we have the Hooser School Shoe and beleve t s the best shoe for the money you can buy. They are warranted. Come n and look at them. We^also have the best lne of rubber goods n the county. LOWE & CO. * * o5.."3 :< ' '.! h

6 a* "** WM mm** DO YOU USE -A Notbug can a Rawer your purpose H* wed as the UNON PHONE connectons n OWOBHO and Corunn*. Pad-uj> subscrbers are enttled to our clubbng rates. Nothng has ever equalled t Nothng can ever surpass t Dr. Kng's New Dscovery ForfS om ' A Perfect Cure: lhomybacfcftfau. a** tll For All Throat and Lung Troubles. TrW&aamGm* HUMPHREYS' Veternary Specfcs care dsease* of Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs and Penlfcr* by actng drectly on the suae P*Jats wthout loss of tme. A.A.lFEVElK. J^h«e**lAB«, tnnhmm Cuxsf tes*, Latsg Fever, MUk Fever. 8. B.SP&.A1XR,LameueM, njures, C0*xa J Rheamatcm, C. U.lgOBE THROAT. Qunsy, Eurxostle. crass J Dstemper. gj*^ WORMS, Bet*, Grab*. E.E.JCOCGH^J Cotfe, nflsenss, nfeuao* cvras)laa«s, Pcuro-Paeuaws. t». P. COLC, Bellyache. WlW*m**n, OOSBS Dterrke*.»r*eae(T, f.g. Pttvunts MlgCABJUACUC. *k SDNEY * BLA PBKX MWHtDBBS, t.f. \SKT9 DtSEAKES. Masge. BrtUw. ccu») fleers. ttmm, Farey. *JK. > pa p coramov. Manag cost. coast Staalce^tva. otouack #**«***.< «0ct»(*: f«jj>l«gt^teu8p*3»c*ftoofc,as^$7 Jt druggsts, or Mnt prepad cm reertpt of prce. Humpbrey*' S-dctae Co., Cor. Wll** sad JOBS Streets, Row York. CT BOOK 31ALKB «t«k. DR. FENNER'S and Backache AH dseases of Kdneys, Hadoer, Urnary Orgass. CURE Also Knaum&tsm. Back ache,heartdlse&ae.gr a vel, Dropsyp Female TroaUlea. Don't become dscouraged. There s a cure for you. f neres-stry wrte Dr. Feauer. He has sprt a lfe tme curng just such C&se* as yours. AU cofsalatou* Free, 'A rravel lodged n my bladder. After ftsuga few boajes of Dr. Femner's Kdney and Backache Cu«-T passed a gravel half as largp as a marble. The medcne presented further formatons. wascum^. W. T. OAKES. Orrx.Va.'* Druggsts. 50c.. *1. Ask for.coofc Book Free, r.vmsatttessrtfcsaft- Church Drectory. Cornuna Tree. Methodst Church 8emc««every Sunday Afternoon at. 2:¾). Prayer meet ng every Thursday evecng. Co run n a Baptst Church. Mornng Berow at 10 a. Tl. Evenng servce, 6:30 p. "n. B. Y P. tj. at 6:10 p. m. Sunday School, 12 H Veekly prayer mc-etn$?, Thursday evenng at 7:00. Prendlv heat.s srt boatng for your M- lew-shp. Lesle Bower, pastor. Corunna M. E. Church. Mo-nn^ s* T ce at 10. Evenng servce at «5:80. Epworth Lfajrue at 5:45 p. u.; class meetm/ at y a, a. Suudaj school at 11:30 m.; Prs.wr ufsrjg Thurndaj evenng at 7:00. Kr.Vnvats. and a eorual welcome wall. R. Woodham, Pallor, PTT TPC! tchng, Bleednc, Protrudng, 4 l.tto Old S..res, Skn Kruptons Tetters Euros, notte^toly < ucout " t/c releved and cured.y ntsl ' Ths remedy has teen used f..>r twenty-< r* and s the only jjuuraueed and true cure. scans effvorae t, tchng Ples-j'our',..*nnt*'s asuccebs.- Burns, Oho. Your remedy s th,» host on earxh for Bleed n t PW. Kraak KlaL^ Mnnesota. ror GAUt t ALL DflUGCtSTS. t AND BO* Vtstrstlun of any othr- cmkf *f pattern*. Tata to : of ther ttyte, accuracy u4 add ttaftplcky, KeCatr* MasartnpfruOMwt'* r**h\**}hm t**t9tu3mtcn^% th-n anycrtjkt «««'Mafarne. On* y-r't ttt!*crr>km(2 number*) ewmh 84«rtla, Lawrt»vumbrf, # ecal*. E'*ty ubraftwf**** HcCal JTM- *'' "* Free. SubacrfSe today..nx Arrftrn Waate4. Ba»*»«M prnnatmm U r 11 c»»h c<>rr.!»4.»<;n. PA«««T«C*alefM( *f to* 4% H, >-O r- freuu'.rc Cataloga* (alwwta* f frmr\wn^k a*at lr«e. *«.«VUS MoCAU. MflCAlAj 0>. M«w Ttm* ^p^fysj WORK FOR SECTON HONEY. Money Can Be Made by Handlng *<«Ths Form. Whle honey cut out of large frames s qute popular n some regons, and sol under the name ot bulk honey, and whle larger quanttes of comb fco^e'y...can thus be produced than n any other way, the greater part of comb honey s produced n small boxes called sectons, holdng about one pound each, as shown n c;\ t. The knd most n use s 414^4¼^¾ nches, outsde measure. My preference, says Farm and Home, s for the T-snper, athough t s not most generally n use. The grade of comb honey foundaton used n sectons s called thn super although some use extra thn A Secton of Honey. super, nd the amount used vares all the way from a trangular pece measurng one nch on each sde up to enough to fll the secton practcally full. consder t economy to use the larger amount, a bottom started fveeghths of an nch deep, and a top starter comng down wthn one-eghth nch of ths, the startng comng wthn about one-sxteenth of an nch of the wood at each sde. When the sectons, are thus flled wth foundaton there a no need of an excluder to keep the queen out of the super., Bees do not HO readly begn work n secton supers as n extractng supers wth eombs that have been prevously used. n order to start wort more promptly, t U advsable to use n the frst super of the season one or more bat secton. These are aeetlons that had been partly flled at the close of the prevous seaon, and the honey then empted out by the bees after the sectons were taken from the hves. A sngle bat n the mddle of a super wll answer, and n a poor season have had 100 or more of these bats flled and sealed and not another secton touched. f only when supers are thus gven, the bees would start to work n them, and keep at work n them, what a blessng! But alas, Just about the tme work s farly started n the surplus apartments, some colony wll take a noton to swarm, stoppng all surplus work, and f left to ts own devces sends out a second swarm some eght days after the frst, and then at ntervals of a day or two other swarms, sometmes fve or sx n all, the last of them beng mere handfula, and only a vexaton. Other colones wll Cake the same noton, and the season wll end wth a large proporton of worthless colones and lttle or no surplus honey. Although t s not an easy thng to prevent each colony from swarmng at least once, t s well to know some of the thngs that tend to prevent excessve swarmng. Frst of al)v;comej». abundance of room, and here extracted houey has the advantage. C. P. Dadant, one of the heavest producers of extracted honey n the country, uses very large -hves, wth no excluders, and not more than one colony n 20 swarms. Keepng down the temperature s mportant Place the hves n shade where there s a free crculaton of ar, as under shade tree^. Also let there be plenty of ventlaton of the hve tself by means of large entrances, or by rasng the hve on blocks. When workng for extracted honey, an openng of one-quarter n the entre wdth of the hve may be allowed to each story. Make Chcken House Snug. Cracks n the chcken house are not good thngs to have n the wnter, when a cod wnd drves snow through them, and there can be better thngs n the summer, when the festve mte must have a place of shelter. However, t s next to mpossble to buld wth hard pne lumber and not have cracks. The best thng to do s to stop them from the outsde, wth battens, to keep out the cold, and;stop them wth crude ol or coal tar from the nsde, to keep out the mtes. Sell the Old Roosters. Agan let us say t sell the old roosters. The very next tme you go to town, crate the old fellows up and take them along. They are only boardng wth you now and gvng nothng for ther board. They rush n and gobble all the chckens' feed they can get, are often mean to the smr.ller chckens and are not even an ornament to the flock. Of course ths does aot refer to the pure breds of hgh scorng class, but to the lot usually found on the farms. The trouble s, too many of ths knd axe stll found DRY FEEDNG CF FOWLS. Opnon of One Poultryman That t * Not * Good as Mash. notce n a report of the Ontaro statc u that the feedng of mashes to poultry s dscouraged, f one wll but rad the report they wll see that n the feedng of the hens at that: staton the very necessty for feedng maubes s removed. The men that "S'avocate the feedng of mashes are generally rght, for they do that merely to lessen the work of the dgestve organs'n grndng up dry gran. see, n lookng over ths report, that. cho.'manager of the poultry department says that he has been usng sprouted gran n the place of he mashes. Very well, that s just what we mght expect. Th dea n the feedng of mashes s Cvrrerl out n the feedng of the sprouted gran. A lttle further on see that he s also feedng soaked gran and fnds soaked oats very good. There s another substtute for dry gran. Stll further on 1 read (bat mangels and meat also are fed. The report says that "durng very cold weather n the wnter they fed occasonally a lttle corn, ether n the mornng or evenng," and that ths s fed usually n the ltter. Now the wrters who oppose feedng mashes wll take ths report as an argument on ther sde, and 1 am wllng to admt that n the establshment of the professonal feeder or raser of poultry there s lttle or no need for mashes. Bat fnd that, on the farm we do not hare the great varety of food for poultry that s had n ' oh establshments. On the ordnary farm the fowls get gran and water almost entrely durng the whole season when the brds have no access to green thngs out of doors. They get the scraps from the table, but n a flock cf perhaps 2p0 fowls the table scraps do not go far. So t s a good dea to nduce every farmer keepng fowls under such condtons to feed a mash once a day preferably n the mornng, for at that tme the fowls wll have empty crops and wll make the moat of the mash. At nght the fowls, beng perhaps not hungry, much of the mash may be left to freeze. t "f farmers can be nduced to gve a warm mash once a day t wll save much sckness among the fowls, for most of the troubles come from ndgeston. have also found that most cases of ndgeston are Curable by feedng no corn or other gran for awhle, but feedng soft foods. The mash s very easly made, by puttng; the meal or mddlngs n a pal and pourng n bolng water at nght, allowng t to stand n the cellar or the ktchen tll mornng. By moraln* V-'-t food Wll be all cooked. MAKES CLEANNG EASER. Put a Droppng Board Under Your Perches n Chcken House. Why not have a droppng board n your chcken house and keep t clean? Ffteen mnutes once a week wll he tme enough to clean after 100 hens, Roosts and Droppng Board. and you won't dread gong nto t After cleanng the board cover t wth ashes or slaked lme. Have roosts all on a level, says Mssour Valley Farmer, and the hens won't crowd. CHCKEN CHAT. Keep the feed dshes clean. Nests should be kept clean, even f new straw has to be put n every day The demand for poultry products s such that there s no danger of an over-supply. The success wth poultry depends on the tte thngs as much as on the large thngs. Charcoal and grt are as mportant as food and vyater. Do not thnk of tryng, to rase chcks wthout both. Many a country boy and grl mght make a neat lttle sum of money yearly by keepng a flock of chckens. Experments n confnng layng turkeys are showng that t. does not greatly affect the fertlty of the eggs. t takes about a handful of gran to fll the crop of a fowl at nght. Ths s a sate gude to follow n Cedng yarded fowls. PUK, cool water s one of the essentals n keepng the flock healthy, bo hot permt the brds to drnk from stagnant pools, A handful of black walnut 'waves n the sttng hens' nests and a few lmbs broken off and hung n the hen house keep the place free of all lce and mtes. Whle the Unted States produces more e gs than any' other naton on the globe, we also mport more than any other naton. There s no danger :>f overstockng the market when eggs are beng mported. The Cure-A. Tho cure-all n the poultry yard la ^ood management. ts prncpal vrtue s that H s preventve. Wth t there s no need for stmulanta, regulators aad other nakeshfu. BV MAKNG OF A GOOD COW. Frst Ffteen Month* of Calf* Lfe Determnes Her Future, A wse old dary farmer once sad to Gov, Hoard, "The cow s ether made or unaade n the frst 15 months of her lfe." Questoned farther he stated that he had come to hs rvnvwmvwmrmmn m****^**,*+**&***>*m*0*0*+**am WASTE AND WANT. concluson after years of observaton and practce. He had notced ths: Easy for Farmer to Lose Much Feed That where a farmer took the best by Poor Feed Sox. possble care of hs hefer cft-lves, kept them dry and clean, fed them well on Recently was at the home of a good growng food and kept them frend who, although a hard-workng, gong n a strong, grewthy manner, f and n many respects a good farmer, thoy were well bred from good dary does not seem to be gettng rch very stock, nearly all would make good fast. We were at the barn, and 1 went cows, whereas, f they were ever so n the stables. He has those old-fash- 1 well bred, f they were neglected, and oned V-shaped mangers, open at.he j badly caved'for, t was rarely any of top, and the horses had pulled ther j them would mako good cows. hay out, scattered t all over the "We beleve frmly n the truth 6 stalls and tramped t nto the manure. what ths old farmer sad," adds Gov, At the present excessvely hgh prces j Hoard.. "More good cows are spoled' for feed of all knds t would not take! by neglect, nsuffcent food, durng them long at the rate they were gong r t he frst 15 months than from any to waste a good many dollars, says a wrter n Farm and Home. f were losng hay lke that don't beleve could sleep nghts. t suggested the folly of feedng roughness of any knd so that stock can pull t down and waste t The open snatzr-ar s an abomnaton. The old-tme rack s no better. Wth ether the stock are free to waste as' much as they feel lke, and there are some horses and cattle whch seem to take a joy n pullng or throwng ont ther f^ej. The best feedng contrvance for hay that have ever seen was made as shown n the llustratons. There s never any waste here. The greatest objecton had tc t was that n feedng com A Good Manger. the stalks would ple up and have to be carred out The 'other thng suggested was the folly of a man's workng hard and savng and scrmpng generally whle he allow* a few extravagances and carelessness to rob hm of a large part of the fruta of ha labors. Three or four hours' work and a tew feet of lumber would have fxed those mangers so the horses could not waste ther hay, and the whole cost of the Job would have been pad back n two or three weeks. Most of us have some chershed folly lke ths whch we clng to, and wftlch, perhaps, we are 90 used to that we are unconocfoua of t f a man works fathfully he should get ahead n the world, not rery rapdly, perhaps, but perceptbly. f he does not t may be the fault of crcumstances, but more often t b hs own. APPLES A3 HOG FOOD. Wndfalls Can Be Proftably Harvested by the PJge. have had consderable experence n feedng wndfalls from the apple orchard to hogs, wrtes a farmer n Farm and Home. allow my hogs to run n the orchard untl the apples begn to drop heavly, f ths ever cecum. Then wheu begn to pck up waste frut for cder, dryng, or apple butter, feed to the hogs the parngs and all the frut that cannot use. The fattenng qualtes of apples seem to be gute hgh, for my anmals thrve and do well. n addton to consumng waste frut and a great many njurous nsects, the hogs root over the ground and keep t well strred. Ths s very benefcal to trees and s about the only method of cultvaton 1 practce. When waste apples arc not equally avalable the hogs are n good condton for fnshng on corn, oats, peas or buckwheat meat Because of the thrfty condton nduced by ths succulent feed, they put on fat very rapdly, and are ready for butcherng at almost any tme. BLEATS AND SQUEALS. A fat hog s not always healthy. A supply of roots s necssary to success wth sheep. The motto of the shepherd should be dp, dp, dp. Swne at all ages approach more nearly to a cash product than any other stock on the farm. Take a small bucket of tar and smear the sheep's noses occasonally. Ths wll dscourage the gadfly. Sow Hat turnps now. Part of the crop can be fed on the ground, and wll be a gteat help when the srass s frost-btten. Watch the flock carefully and see that no wounds get flyblown. f any such wounds are found, apply kerosene or turpentne. See that every maggot s destroyed, and then apply tar. Have some way of markng ypur sheep. Many neghbors h&ve been made enemes for lfe by ther sheep gettng mxed n the pasture, Farm Journal. Old Relables. Whle we are watng for the adaptaton of the automoble to farm work, old Bll and Jerry can be depended on to pull the plow and harrow. The best of t ts the manure that Bll and Jerry make s good for the land, wue the refuse from an automoble wll not beaejjt anythng.,^,. other cause. "Good blood, dary heredty and all that s necessary. t s the foundaton. Hut f we are gong to make good cows out of these hefers we must pay close attenton to.how we start thero on the road. "For years we.have been rearng hefer calves. Some of them we have sold and some of them we have kept We are greatly mpressed by our experence wth the truth of the old farmer's theory. t s true that we take great pans that the hefer shall be well born. Rut that s only half the proposton, the frst halt "f she s to have good, large capacty she mnst be steadly well nourshed from the begnnng to the tme she s frst n calf. Ths done she has a greatly ncreased chance of proft to her owner. n buyng hefers t s worth a good deal to *now how they have been reared. Of one thng we are certan, and that s that t pays to feed the hefer skm mlk daly tll she s 10 to 12 months old, together wth a pnt to a quart of oats. Such feedng wth good care turns out much fner cows than does* the treatment hefer calves usually receve/* PASTURE GATE. One Whch Wll Gve Paaaage to Cows, but Wlt Keep Out Hog*.... here show drawng p the plan have of keepng hogs from gong from hog pastures to cow pasture and at the same tme allowng the cattle to go from one pasture to the other at Wll Let the Cow* Through, wll, wrtes a correspondent of Ths Farmer. The openng may be as wde as desred. Two by two-nch plank are naled to the fence posts about four or cx nches from the ground and two extra posts are set out from the fence about a Toot. The plank s naled to the nsde of these posts and ths plank should be about four feet longer than the one fastened to the fence, so as to go by the openng at each end about two feet. The hogs cannot jump the two planks and small hogs that go between them cannot jump over, as they are lengthwse of the openng. The cattle wll readly step over. The same plan may be used for sheep, only three planks may be necessary to retan them, although only use two for them also. A HH3H-OLASS DARY. Fne Qualty of Mlk Suppled to Select Trade. A Massachusetts physcan owns and operates a dary farm where over 200 cows are kept the year round. The mlk s sold to a hgh class of buyers n Boston. Four knds of whole mlk are sold, also two knds of skmmed mlk and three qualtes of cream. A fecal grade of mlk, testng sx per cent, s produced for convalescents and sck folks, who need the rchest mlk possble. Jer&eys and Guernseys supply ths hgh grade of mlk. The mlk furnshed especally for babes contans about four per cent, butter fat and s mlked from Ayrshre cows. Jerseys, Ayrshres, Guernseys, Devons and. Shorthorns are all used n ths dary. Every stable and barn on the place s k<;]>t neat and clean, and no foul odors are allowed to permeate them. The mornng's rulk from ths dary s cooled, bottle^ nnd delvered to the many customers n tme for ther use on the breakfast table. But a couple of cents more per quart s charged comng gs O for ths mlk than for that from less santary surrou'nd- Lua. of unknown qualty. Be G-sntle wth the Cow. Be gentle wth the cow, for you wll feel better about t and the cow certanly wll. There s a money value about geutleness also, but ths should not be the tlrst thng to be consdered. The quet cow s the one that wll pro^ duce the most mlk. The cow that s frghtened has her dgestve processes nterfered wth, and these dgestve processes are the ones that control the manufacture of mlk. A bad-tempered hred man should not be tamed logp* wth the da ry cowa. Every Heart-Ache Every pan n the breast, dffcult breathng, palptaton, flutterng or dzzy spell means that your heart s stranng tself n ts effort to keep n moton. Ths s dangcrou*. Some sudden stran from overexerton or exctement wll completely exhaust the nerves, or rupture the walls or arteres of the heart, and t wll step. Releve ths terrble stran at once wth Dr. Mles' Heart Cure. t nvgvates and strengthens the heart nerves and muscles, stmulates the heart acton, and releves the pan and msery. Take no chances; make your heart strong and vgorous wth Dr. Mles' Heart Cure. " suffered terrbly wth heart dsease. have been treated by okarent physcans for my trouble wthout results. went to a phyatctntj n Memphs, who clamed that had dropsy of the heart. Hq rat the x-ray on roe, and n wmnecnoa wth hs medena he Cam* near roakug a knw of me. Some tme before ths a Mr. Young, of St. Lous, wa* n ovr town. He saw ray condton, and recommended Dr. Mles' Heart C-r* to rr.t. 1 gave t lttle attenton untl rr.y r;turn from Memphs, concludc-l to try t, and an* p' to say Uxree bottles cured me. CHARLES GOODBK CaratbcrsvUle. Dr. Mtes' Heart Cur* s seta ftv your druggst, who wh auaraajt** CMC the- «r*t wttte wll benestt f t fto* re wlt refund your money. Mles Medcal Co, Elkhart. lad Grand Trunk Ralway Systea SAgT BOTJOT? g&olt COm/MMA, l*o. 13 Detrot L*e»J, except Smumr *Jl**» No. & Detrot Bxprees, except SvnAay 11*4 aam fo. 18 Detrot Local, except Sttftday 6:1* pat No. 14 Darand Local, ex. Sunday 0:1* pm WEST BOrjSr> FROM COKtTj* fta. No. 17 Gr»&d Haven ««eal. ex. Stand*** S:39 aa>»0.1» O'd BarfdB Local, "X. Snada* jft&aas Kt. 13 Grand Haveu Local, ex. Sunday SnS pa No. Grand Rapd*. Local, ex. 8qnday 03?.pat Sold wde restlbnle trans of coaebee and deepng earsare operated to New York and PhUbdetpfea. va Nagara Fall*, by the Grand Trnnk-LelUqh Valley Route. G, D. YduNG, Aft. PKCBATK ORDktfL State of Mlefcfgaa, County of HfeUwaaaee, M*. At t» staton ot tfc* Probate Court Car sad County, beld n toe Prooate Offlee, n tfae Cty of Cornnna, «a Wednesday, tbe 18%¾ day of September, ua the year one thousand nne hundred and arte*. ' Prawent, Kattfcew Bonk, Judge of Proonte. n taw matter <*f tfa* Estate 0* Martha J. Steele, dec*****. On readng and flng tfec petton of fred O. ateafet* prayng tea* adatfastnao of s*m estate may be ftraafed to Oene«e ff. Qttxepe or nuae otner snttable person. t 1«ordered, that the l«ta dayetowtober, next, at tea o'clock n th* forenoon, at sad Pro* bate Ofte*, be assgned for neartsa- aaat petton. And t to further wtdsrad, that» espy of taj order be publshed brec successve vsefce L.r?Ttoua to sad dajr of hearng, n toe Oormms journals wevwpaperprnted'and etatatuaag n «ad Oonnty of Sslnwaaaee. MATTHMW BUrHr, _ Judge of Pvobate. BT K^Ttrnuna fc. anmxt.probata STATC or MJCHOAN-Coufty of Bnlawas-»ee.». at a dkshlob of the Probate Court for saat County. n«ld at the Probate Oawce, n the Cty Of Csruona, on Mnn4a«. the'ath OB af(aa, tembor, n the year one thoneand nne hundred and aeycq. Present, Balthew Buab, Judcre of Probate. n the matter of the e«tate of Jacob W. Knoblauch, deceaueav On readng and flung the petton of Johanna August* Knoblaucn, prayucr that adutnlstratton de bonla nan of «ajd *»tate mar be granted to John P. Mtchell, or eawe other sutable person. t lt orderrd. th»t the 14th day of October, next, ax ten o'clock n the forenoon, at sad Probate Oftce, t>e asscued for Bearng sad petton. And t Js further ordered, that a copy of ths order be publshed three auccesalye -weeks prevous to sad day of hearng, n the COrttsua. Journal, a newspaper prnted and crculatng n amd County of Shawassee. XATTaUCW BTJ8H, Judge of Probate. Tanted money s all rght provded t n no way closes the mouth of the* acceptor toward the evl means used to obtan t," sad Rev. Lews G. Wlson, of Boston, before the Mchgan Conference of Untaran churches. BepresenUtve Nelson C. Rce 1«one of the leadng members and offcers n an orga&latcn. effected ta St. Joseph by the local retal merch> anta for the purpose of fghtng tha htg catalogue Arms of the country. No. 13 seems to be Gov. Wanxer'g pet number, hoodoo, or no hoodoo/he was assgned to the thrteenth car* rlage n the parade n St. Lous, Mo, and Wednesday afternoon word waa receved that he had seat No. 13 at the dnner gven to Presdent Roosevelt and the promnent men assembled at Canton for the exercses at the McKnley monument Walter Hale, of Muskegon, s n a crtcal condton as the result of football practce. Hale had an attack of typhod durng the summer and the exerton en the grdron has caused a blood clot on the bran, together wth paralyss. Patrck's Wll. An elderly gentleman, who knew somethng of law, lved n ah rsh vllage where no solctor eve penetrated, and was n the habt of arrangng the dsputes of hs neghbors and makng ther wlls. At an early hour one mornng he was aroused from bs slumbers by a loud knockng at the gate, and puttng hs head out of the wndow, he asked who was there. "t's me, yer honor Paddy Flaherty. could not get a wnk'of sleep thnkng of the wll have made." "What's the matter wth the wllr* asked the amateur lawyer. "Matter ndeed," repled Pat, "sure 've not left myself a three-leggej atool to alt dowa upon!" An Exhbton StunL "MaJpedes are the fourth and ffth pars of head appendages of chllo pods." "What's that to me?" "Nothng. occasonally lke to dkplay a ht of knowledge that nobody else 1 PCMbly have,".''^^'sssje^^^,^^^ A^afe'' t^r v2a»-"*t- *S»

7 SSV^:' m^r. w? - -' '"" :. '*> ummmmu mm p*p^fp?fp* ^^Wj^jy^pP^BW"^!"^ U ',JJU» #».»,'- J'jjjftB^w^j'y'tf^Wrfg^ CONFctSSEa KLLNG HUSBAND. a f^:- f/ lra. Mana Chadwlcfc Mak««Remark- h* Statement n Atlanta. Detrot mpelled, t s beleved, by mother k>ve and a desre to sheld ard sate her aon, Mr*. Mnne Chadwck" V_ha» made a remarkable confesson n the UtlM Tllage of Atlanta, 250 mles north of Detrot, that she shot and klled her husband, Charles E. Chad-..' wck, a mll foreman, whose body was found n the road near hs home ten **ays ago. Foot prnts near the body led to Chadwck's son. Eugene, beng BUS pec ted of the kllng, and he s under ar^ebt. n a wrtten confesson, Mrs. Chadwck says she shot her.husband. wth her son's rfle b^wu-se. 'no abused htm-..she" s:..yv, she rm': par of (h«*.b'^y : s Uu>'s. 'ft'"/?at husband down 'hv \ :t ar<.! 'x>h>u hm. After W7*;n.: rl!; 1 ccu/-?; U-.:.V;utred to connut. s-.u-h'u', 'm'. * d^nuy burst nto h;*r r;>;v:: n t:::e!u t:t :.vthe revolver fr >nj ;;er. AGANST CLOSED SHOP. ; STEALS 0TH F1 MAN'S GRL. Ann Arbor Man rtf^ces H^u C!*an;«Her Wnd and Es^e. Ann Arbor. t ha* ju.-. b<v<m<e known that "Jack" Wu'rster. of A a t Arbor, and Mss Jesse Da-r ft-rjr* 1 J la an elopement at Cedar a^d*, *- The young woman dned \\\'.< her fance, Claude WJnne. went!u tl.e th, 1 ater wth hm and th'tr vttu.t a headache. F:f*«n nruvs a'-er Wnne left the h-sos*; an aato recuyd Ctzens' ltduttraf Assocaton Meet* n Battle Creek. Battle Creek. The ffth annual natonal conventon of the Ctzens' n- dustral Assocaton of Amerca held here was of unusual nterest. The.assocaton now numbers somewhere n the neghborhood of 400 local and afflated assocatons n almost'every! State of the unon, and t has fraternal 1 relatons wth organzatons n Cana-! da and Great Brtan. The platform, of : the assocaton s as follows: } "N T o closed shops. J ''No restrctons as to the use of tools, machnery or rwateal except : such "as are unsafe. "No lmtatons of output. "No r'^frcton as to the number of apprentces and helpers, when of propvr SKO.. ",\n boycott. : "No sympathetc strke. "N>> S(<;:!t0t' of ndependent work-. nsen to tn- labor unon. N>) compulsory use of the unon lab.1." MCHGAN NEWS LEGSLATURE N SPECAL SESSON (K STRONGER PRMARY LAW S THS GOVERNOR'S FXED PURPOSE. LOBBYNG GETS A TOUCH. (Vttacr. the Forty Per Cent Clause and Wants Delegates to Natonal Conventon Elected at Prmares. CAROUSES A3 WFE DES. ML Clemcna Man n Saloon Whle Woman De* Alone. Mr Clemens. Whle her husband sj«ent the nght n carousal, Mrs. Amela Xcol, wfe of George NcoL wal p-p**" merchant on Macomb *t/eet n ths cty, ded alone at ther AlMfM Mem»r»J Halt, Am Arbor, Plana have been drawn for the tendng to be erected at Ann Arbor as a memoral to the alumn of Mchgan unversty. The structure wll ba n commemoraton of those Students of the unversty who have djatfngulsned themselves ether n the door, the young woman emerged and they drove fve m lea to the county seat, secured the lcense and Mnted a mnster oat of bed after mdnght, and were marred. Wurster ^ la here, but refuses to tell where hs wfe s hdng. Calls t Real Blackmal. Muskegon. Allegng that he deed ed property to hs late wfe because she threatened hm wth some exppsnre and that the transfer was made under pure blackmalng terms, Henry M. Gannon, a former assstant postmastter of Muskegon, commenced sut n the crcut court askng for an accountng of the property and pettonng that he be redeeded one-half of the property. "Black Hand" at Lansng. Lansng. The polce have dscovered a "Black Hand" organzaton among some boys between the ages, of 14 and 17 years. The lad3 have sent out Wood-curd lng warnngs to other boys, and attacked -a boy named Fowler and gave hm severe treatment. t s alleged the boys carry revolvers. Thnk She's Mssng Nun. Traverse C!y -- Trances Elmna Cox, who cla^s v. hr > a graduave of the Boston sel of c..uory and who has delvered ProTr'^g lectures to socety, people here, s beng held at Frankfort on the supposton tlat she s the mssng Sster Mary from sadora convent. All De from Spnal Troubles. Muskegon. Pour deaths n the famly of the Sate John Kanaar, of Muskegon Heghts, have occurred from spnal trouble n the past year, and Tuesday the 11-months-old daughter ded of spnal menngts. Verdct Aganst Saloonkeeper. Jackson. A crcut court jury av'^rded Mrs. Nette Marrnane damages of $5,925 aga'nst Fred Mller, a former Grass Lak^ saloonkeeper, and hs bondsmen, be::".use Mller sold lquor to the wo;.- v's Muband after he had been orde.; : uc : to uo so. Dogs Kll Alens Sheep. Alpena SUep kllng- dogs are on a rampage 5n Alpe:v\ townshp. Twenty sheep were kll'.-1 on the farm of Wllam Hazell n one- n'^ht and August Kannowsk tost a targe nuuber. * Raps the Y. M. C. A. Grand Rapd? * -?: = -w! and more prayer s the s"»;.«: '-' ' '' F. Lovctt,- flf the WenltLy Ave :.T; baptst chnrch, advocates ft" r;-m? j^essfal work by the local Y. M. C. A., whch n«t tn a couple of pool tables ths fall n O'der to hold the b^ys. % Lberal Relgon Men at A ^r? Aracr. Ann Arbo.. The ar.ma Un^r.^n conference of Lbera Rel ons w.a held at the Untaran hnr.. A -jerrnon was preached by '.sr. John M - **r, of Glasgow, Scotland. war or n cvl lfe. Already tha com tract has been let for the foundaton walls and steel structural work, whch wll he begun wthout delay. The other contracts wlt be let n tme to contnue the work of buudrna; wthout nterrupton. home on Stapleton street At nght Neol called Wa wfe orer the telephone tellng her that he would he home between nne and ten, havng been detaned by an agent At an early hour Mrs. tycol w*a found lyng on the floor dead. Her body was stll warm when he neghbors forced an entrance to the house and the doctor who came at once pronounced t apoplexy. Ncol was located n a down* town saloon, but was unable to realse what had happened. Mrs. Ncol was formerly Mss Amela Webber. Donates AH Her Money. Battle Creek. Huntng Mchgan for some frend of Mrs. Edth Curts, who would help bury her, Coroner H. H. dwel had gven up n dsgust when he receved a gft of ten "dollars from another woman who led a smlar lfe wth the note, "t's all have, but poor Edth s welcome." Alleged relatves of the grl, who commtted sucde at the Saratoga hotel, T Otev turned down requests to take the remans, everybody desertng but the one woman. The W.'C. T. U. also came forward wth funds to keep the bodr from the medcal school at the Unversty of Mchgan. «Stl After "Whsperng Bll." Muskegon. Sherff Woodbury, of Ottawa county, and a force of deputes worked near Ravenna, Muskegon county, searchng for clues that may ncrmnate "Whsperng Bll" Schmmel, the alleged Dennson murderer. n the murder pf ra Reynolds, who dsappeared from Sparta n 1898, Free Methodst campers unearthed bones near Ravenna some years ago and as the murder has been lad at Schmmel's door the story of the bones s beng run to earth. Won't Gve Up Msson. Grand Rapds. Mel Trotter has been oftered $6,000 a year for a lease of the Cty Rescue msson to the western vaudevlle crcut, but wll not do t. About two years ago Trotter rased over $20,000 by herculean efforts and bought Smth's opera hovse, whch for years.vl been the home of burlesque n Grand Rapds, The place cost $47,000. Trotter uses t for a msson and hod many servces TT t jdurnp; the week. He says the vaudevlle people wll buld another theater here f they can not get hs place. More Thart 5,0C3 Students. Ann Arbor. The total regstraton n the varous departments of the U. of M., accordng to the report of Secretary Wade, was 4.3&0 students, ar. ncrease of 287 over the correspondng date of last year. All of the departments except the dental eole?* show ncreases, and n the latter there N at present a loss of only one student. T>e fgures assure a regstraton of over &,000 students before the close o the college year, based on the regstraton after tha correspondng date last year. The Message. Tbt Aaxe legslature was camed to :rder at n.ocn Monday a specal sesson to consder the matters to be pre- tated for ts consderaton by Gov. Varner n hs message. Nearly a full.ol L.all was present. The message of :ov. Warner, read to the legslature, s "s follows: To the forty-fourth legslature Actng by vrtue of authorty vested n tho governor by sec. 7, of Art. V, of th consttuton of the state of Mchjj-n, -1-hf,ve convened the legslature u extra sesson, sncerely belevng that the falure of the legslature at ts recent regular sesson to enact a better prmary electon law and to make necessary provson for the mantenance of Central Mchgan Normal college fully warrants such ac* ton. There cannot, fully beleve, be the slghtest doubt n the mnd of any candd person who has gven the matter even casual consderaton that a va's* majorty of the people of Mch 1?an desre that thvre be emboded n our statutes provsons whch shall apply alke to all offces whch they affect and whch shall place the nomnaton of Canddates for these offces absolutely and fnally a the handsof the people, wthout recourse at anytme or under any condtons to a delegate conventon. The truth of ths asserton s sb apparent that, 't should be unnecessary to more than state t. ft cannot be successfully controverted.;... The demand of the peonle ba& bee recognzed h all prmary electon legslaton thus far enacted Jn ths state, *ave only ^8^^00^16^818110^^.^11^8 to the nomnaton of canddates for governor and leutenant-governor. n all cases where t apples to the nomnaton of canddates for congress, the legslature, county aha cty offces, t provdes that the canddate recevng the hghest number of votes cast at the prmary shall be the party nam-v natej. n. no case s there any reference whatever to a percentage, how* ever small, of the total vote cast. These laws were pettoned for by the people because of ther desre to make ther own nomnatons and not delegate that power to conventons whch mfght or mght not carry out ther wll. Not only!s there ho percentage provson n the laws coverng the nomnaton n the cases mentoned, but no legslature ever had the temerty to suggest the ncluson of such a provson: Al clearly understood what the people demanded. t s well known to all of you that the 40 per cent provson of the present law was ncluded n that statute as a matter of necessary compromse. The house passed a general prmary bth whch contaned no percentage feature. n ths form the bll could not pass the senate, and n order that the best possble start toward the accomplshment of the reform demanded by the people mght/be ruade t was necessary o nclude the percentage provson, f ths had not been done no prmary legslaton would have been enacted at that sesson of the legslature. n 1906 a total of S64 canddates for poltcal offce, ncludng canddates for state, congressonal, legslatve and county offces, were nomnated by drect vote. Ths number lkewse ncluded 70 subsequently successfulcanddates for seats n ths honorable body. Yet, n SC2 of these- cast-.s no one ever for a moment thought of requrng that the successful canddal?s poll any gven percentage "of a total vote. t would be as reasonable to suggest that the consttuton be amended so as to requre that unloss some party canddate for governor or leutenant governor receved 40^ per cent of the total vote cast at the general electon the choce of those offcals should be made by the legslature as o make t necessary for a delegate jonvent'^' to choose the party canddate f :' '"> person pons 40 per cent of the tot: ' vote cast at the prmary. There s n '"gument that can be advanced n s.. ort of the one proposton that w;' lot apply wth equal force to the ov. On the other hand, the absolute w<~..;-?ss of the so called argument n ts ; hcato'. to ether proposton s so a^j rent as to admt.f no dspute. The ttter folly of rr Mntamlng that the protecton of the r-ople demands hat. n order to bofmp the nomnee nf hs pry for gov-'-:101- or leutenant Bjovernc. 1, a v.erscu must poll any specfed percentage of the total vote cast, whereas the CO" <r:;;:;on of the state provdes Unt.- '.orson havng at the general elec;: "the hs->- t number of votes for governor or ; cnant governor shall be elected," must mpress tself upon the mnd of every ntellgent person. t hardly seems necessary to throw any greater safeguards around the nomnaton of a canddate for an cmcje than the consttuton of the state throws about the electon fter the nomnaton s made. For nearly 60 years the person recevng the hghest ntmber of votes has been tecared elected to orace tn ths Mate :nd no one has yet even thought of advocatng a chance n ths provson of the consttuton. The fact s that no argument worthy of the name has been or wll be advanced n support of the retenton of tho 40 per cent clause n the present prmary law or Mchgan. ueeata whatever may or can be sad n sup*' port of ths clause les the desre of ts advocates to preserve, f possble, the old delegate conventon systemand thus keep from the people the rght to make these nomnatons themselves. Ths phase of the matter 1«so real that t needs smply be mentoned. Even those who n publc.,strenuously advocate retenton of the percentage clause frankly admt n prvate the truth of ths statement", t s hardly tobe presumed that a delegate conyen- % tot] wll come any nearer expressng j the wll of *.he people than wll the! people '.homselves by drect vote. The percentage provson of the prmary law now on the statute books of ths state should be repealed. am frmly of the opnon, too, that the members of the dfferent poltcal partes should be afforded the opportunty to elect by drect vote the delegates to the natonal conventons. Delegat*3 to conventons act tn a purely representatve capacty and should be chosen- by the most dract method. ; know of no r»a*wn why the county and stale conventons should coma bejtween the rank and fle of the party and the nntona) conventon. The frst and second choce of canddates for delegates should be ndcated on the ballot. a any event t s altogether probable tfoat there would be canddates for delegates whose presdental choce woads Well known and n accord wth* fll defned publc sent ment. j Ths prmary electon could be ar* ranged for wth bet Wtle expense, as j the delegates co^'d be elected or, ne jfrat Monday n Aprl, an electon day tfc.ro'asrhout the state. A geaeralylaw of ; ths knd for electng these delegates wottd prevent the holdng of any caucuses and conventons,, «otg &eforf? the call for the natona conventon 3 ssued and enanle those who are expected to elect the nomnees to have more to do wth ther nomnaton. n ths connecton, desre to call your attenton to the necessty of provdng more strngent regulatons governng the holdcg of county and dstrct conventons n localtes where the drect nomnaton system does not prt-vattv No conventon should be called to eect delegates to a natonal, state or dstrct conventon that has not been called. The other course s sometmes taken from good motves, no doubt; but they are seldom made publc. - Cleaner poltcs and good government wll be promoted by makng SHch practces aganst tho letter as well as the sprt of the law. Experence has conclusvely demonstrated that there should be but one prmary day and upon that day all nomnatons under the provsons of the law should be made: Ths change would result n a large savng to the.^^ople. J, would be pleased to see needed amendments made to exstng specal prmary electon laws affectng specfed localtes n order that all law* on ths subject may be made as unform and harmonous as possble. The extenson of the prmary electon system to meet any demands of the people would have my approval. The desre of the people of Mchgan to drectly partcpate n the nomnaton of canddates for Unted States senator s, beleve, generally conceded. The method of gratfyng ths overwhelmng wsh of your consttuents s smple and thoroughly understood by all of you. By makng provson n the prmary law so as to permt the people of the state to nomnate party canddates for Unted States senator by drect vote you wll perform an act *hat wll have the unqualfed approval of the people of the state, regardless of poltcal afflatons. The lobby evl c no less dre and corruptng than t was when drected your attenton to t at the commencement of your regular sesson. At that tme sad: n all matters of legslaton the people are enttled to your best thought ald most conscentous judgment, and you should see to t that your thought j s not drected nor your judgment af- ; fected by any undue nfluence. Publc hearngs and the rght of petton as to &U matters crmng before the legs-, lature are legtmate methods of n- fluencng legslaton. The legslature {should, always be wllng to grant pubj le hearngs to and receve pettons j from all who may be nterested n j measures under consderaton, whether those persons represent publc or prvate nterests. Asde from the hearngs there should be no place, ether n the legslatve halls, the commttee rooms or the lobby for the professonal lobbyst. Hs rght should smply be those enjoyed by the humblest ctzen of the state. The professonal lobbyst has no proper place n legslaton and the sooner he s elmnated therefrom the better, not only for the publc, but for the specal nterests by whch he s employed. The frst step n ths drecton must necessarly be taken by the ndvdual legslators n treatng wth contempt the ntroducer of any so-called "strke" legslaton desgned for the sole purpose of attractng the attenton of these specal nterests, thereby nvtng them to ether pay trbute or to employ the professonal lobbyst a self defense. Such legslaton and ts sponsors should be publcy denounced and ther real purpose exposed. All proposed legslaton should stand or fall on ts merts alone and any arguments as tc those merts should stand the test of full publcty. There s a vast dfference between proper and mproper methods to nfluence legslaton, and n whatever l.vws may be enacted on ths subject a dstncton should be made between them. am n hearty accord wth the doctrne lad down by the supreme court of the Unted States as far back as 1853, when n tho case of Marshall vs. Baltmore & ono Kan way uo, that trbunal sad: "All persons whose nterests may n any way be affected by any publc or prvate act of a legslature have an undoubted rght to ur^ ther clams and arguments, ether u persoa or by counsel, professng to act for them before legslatve commttees, as wen as n «:uu a u* ju&4»v,c, but a hre;' agrmt assumng tc act n a dfferent character u practcng decet on the legslature * * * and servces nvolvng the use of secret means or the exercse of snster or personal nfluences are llegal." To legtmate servces, rendered n,a legtmate way, no-reasonable objecton can. be made. But a.1! appearances for or aganst measures before the eealat.ure should be n;t<e publcly and before the proper tommtteea only.- There should he no lobby that wll not stand the lght of the fullest publcty. Legslaton of the nature' have n mnd has-already been enacted n New York, New Jersey; owa, Wsconsn, Mnnesota, Mssour, Colorado and other states, and n recent conversaton ; wth the governors of several of these states have been assured that t has very largely elmnated the evl at whch t s drected. emphatcally renew the recommendaton prevously made by me that you enact a law that wll free ths state from the corruptng nfluence of the professonal lobbyst and provde for the regstraton and regulaton of all persons who appear before the leg-^ slature or commttees thereof to urge ether the passage or aefeat of pendng measures. The law should not apply to duly accredted counsel or representatves of muncpaltes, publc boards and publc nsttutons. ; An oversght n connecton wth the /p&ssage of the bll askng the regular bennal appropraton for the mantenance of the Central Mchgan Normal College at Mt. Pleasant rendered that act nvald. u order to provde 'necessary funds for t^s praseworthy : nsttuton, t s necessary that the! requred appropraton be made at ths extra sesson. FRED M; WARNER. MCHGAN BREFS. Wellngton R. Burt and Temple Dorr offered to gve $75,000 toward a $100,- 000 audtorum, f the ctzens of Sagnaw wll rase the rest. John Kelher, a Grand Tru^k engneer, wav' thrown from the cap of hs engne near Mareelus, Monday/ and les n a crtcal condton. Senator Wllam Ades Smth sold 0 lot and buldng n Grand Rapds to the Peoples Savngs bank at a prce sad to. have been about $90,000. A jury 1c the crcut has awarded Mrs. Wllam Houseman $5.00M n her sut aganst the D. U. R. for njures receved n the Brmngham wreck last November. Judge Quncy A, Smth, aged 3, who ded at Ann Arbor, after an llness of several months, was an almost lfe long resdent of ngham county and Lansng. Mrs. Nette Mart-nane has been awarded $5,925 damages aganst Fred. Mller, a former saloonst of Gnus Lake. Mller sold Man-nane lquor after he had been posted. 1 Whle playng wth boys hs own age about Grand Trunk ears just north of Grand Rapds, Leo Mofftt, aged 6, fell under a movng swtchng tran and had both legs severed. Mel Trotter, drector of the Grand Rapds Rescue msson, who rased $20,000 and bought the buldng, refused an offer of a $6,000 a year lease from a vaudevlle crcut. J Emel Hopke, of Sterlng, was arrested on the charge of attemptng to kll Maron Mott, also of Sterlng, because of a fanced grevance, and wll be examned as to hs santy.! Kleber P. Rockwell, recently elected member of the consttutonal conventon, has resgned hs poston as member of the board of publc works of Pontac because of lack of tme. Charleb Bowen, aged 15, was arrested at WebbervlJe on a charge of placng an ron plate on tll ; Pere Marquette ralroad tracks. The plot was dscovered before a tran was due. Kalamazoo won the frst round tn the fght wth the M. U. R Judge Adams ssung an order to the company to show cause why t should not comply wth the councl's order to lay grooved rals, ' "f Gov. Warner s re-elected wll hand n my resgnaton," sad Hghway Com:ss?oner Horato S. Earle, a prefacng hs statement that he would soon announce hs canddacy for the governorshp. Acceptng the advce of the polce commsson, the Battle Creek councl wll pass an ordnance demovng the stalls from saloons, a demand made by the women of the Natonal Purty assocaton. As she fnshed a hearty dnner Mss Ella Cooley, 59, of Coldwater. presumably n perfect health, dropped from her char and expred. She was the daughter of one of the frst ctzens of Branch county. 1 State Game and Fsh Warden Perce and hs deputes succeeded n roundng up seven fshermen off the north shore of Lr.ke Mchgan, who had underszed fsh n ther possesson. They were fned $30 each.! At the nquest nto the death of Kenneth Stuart n Sagnaw t was testfed that he went to sleep under a freght car whle ntoxcated and was dragged about for an hour whle t was beng swtched. Albert Olds, aged 21, of Lansng, took poson because a l">-year-od grl refused hs attentons, and when he recovered sad: " told the druggst 1 wanted poson to kll a dog and guess was about rght,"! A commttee of Detrot's representatve colored ctzens wated on Polce Commssoner Smth Frday mornng for the purpose of offerng assstance! to the authortes n rddng the cty of undesrable colored men.! Frs, thought to be of ncendary orgn, on the farm of Robert Bregen* zer, near Pars, destroyed both the house and bam. The bam contaned consderable farm machnery and crops. The fre orgnated n the barn and caught the h,onse. Bregenzer s a former supervsor of Green townshp. DETROT GOES WLD OVER THE WNNNG OF 3ASE8ALL PENNANT. WARD S HELD FOR TRAL Varous Matters of Note and Comment From All Parts of the State Brefly Told. Detrot and the P«nna.nt 4 The stran of anxety over thj wn- ; n:ng of tle b3.u;/;j:-\-'pennant by Dej trek's dolzed Tdes'' was releved j or. Saturday when the news came that.. the game wth the St. Lous ' Browns'' was won. Tb-'n the shoutng be?:m. ; St^d.busness num joned n the yell j of trujuph, anr the crowds n the! streets gave vent to ther pent up joy. Detrot's place on the m?.p of fame j was marked v'.h the c'owug color* ' ar.d untl a a:-:! hoar of the nght tha throngs n the streets kept up tho 1 celebraton of a s^orous vctory. Now, the world's champon shp seres are! to come. Should Detrot's "Tges" wn : that the result would be beyond conjecture.. Just now there s glory enough. The "Ters" won the pennant.! Won. Lost. Percent. Detrot Athletcs.;...' - S.S Chcago... S7 4.57$ Cleveland.;.'...' New York, S3.453 St Lous... Boston... Washngton 6¾ S «.323 Ward Seld for Tral-.Representatvs Charles E. rward took hs seat n'the.'specal sesson of the legslature, wth the knowledge of havng been bound over to appear' before the recorder's court of Detrot on a charge of manslaughter, n connecton wth the deafh of Edth Presley, senate proofreader, as ; the result of a crmnal operaton. * Ths decson was 'rr.de known by Polce Justce-Jeffres r'ter thr?. hrng Saturday» although t was not offcally recorded untl. Monday. No evdence %as offered by he defense.. Senator Arthur Turtle, attbrrs^y for Ward, strove to-have the crss dsmssed, clamng that no evl n'c r! of crme on- Ward's pr.rt hr.d been brought out by the evdence. Shrewd Move Faled. All of the property anf money of the Flyng Rollers, known also as the Chldren of srael and the House of Davd, was turned over to Benjamn and Mary at a meetng at the colony headquarters near St. Joseph, and Benjamn beleved that as a legal nsttuton the church was passng out of exstence. "Formerly the property of the colony has been held by a board of trustees who also had complete contro* of tta affars. No provson wa* made for the dsposal of (he property at the death of ether of the "anonted", leaders, an the colonsts hold the belef that they wll never de. j t s beleved that? f ejamn wll now branch out nto the ndustral felds, whch he ha* contemplated foe some tme, provdng the state does not stop hm. He has already announced plans for an mmense amusement park. The rules of the church do not provde for any pay for the workers and n the future Benjamn, wll reap the profts for hmself. Just at ths pont the Attorney General's department through Deputy Chase says the hope to escape prosecuton from the state by takng over the effects of the socety as hs wrsoual property was n van. " had been advsed that the op- poslte plan was to be put nto effect, sad Mr. Chase. "Accordng to the nformaton gven to me Purnell woulds turn over everythng to the colony. But ths plan s not an evason of thelaw as was ntended, and wll not deter the state from contnung the prosecuton. t wll not make any dfference, even f the colony turns n ta charter as a socety. t stll exsts as one, despte the ruse to make t appear a personal property." [ A New Prmary Law. j The admnstratonsts 'who drew tho new prmary electon bll for presentaton at the specal sesson dd not consult the attorney general's department. That department has a draft of * bll whch may or may not be oftered to the law makers. The fsature of the new admnstraton bll whch s attractng the most attenton s the secton relatve to tho electon of delegates to natonal conventons. The bll provdes for ther electon at a sprng prmary, dolntf away entrely wth conventons. t also provdes for the nomnaton of Unted States senators and requres all poltcal partes to make nomnatons under the provsons n case any one poltcal party sdopts t. The admnstraton men clam ther bll provdes a workable, comprehensve prmary electon system. t does not nclude any 40 per cent clause. A copy of the bll wll be ntroduced the frst day of the sesson. Some of the state's lawyers are sayng that t s full of legal blowholes. Gdeon Wentworth, for 50 year3 a 'resdent of Genesee county, and a promnent farmer, s dead at the ago of 86 By the wll of Mss Mary McNtt. deceased, n Pontlac, the Woman's hosptal, of Detrot, wll get $500. Jr.any other bequests are made. Mss McNff devoted herself to unostentatous charty. The supreme court decded that tho, Chcago. Kalaraaat-o & Sagnaw ral- 1 road can pay for ts rlght-of-w^y trcrz. :the center of the cty of Kalamazoo.,to the outskrts at the valuaton t >even years ago. M. H. Lane and F. B. Lay, former owners, charged that contract made at that tme was nj vald and asked for the present value, (whch s double that of seven years ^ ^ ^ ^ - ^ ' - " ^ - - ^

8 mrnm^mmm^^mrnm^m^mmmsmw^' 5W<r-&r; mw!; \: / «.jfc' % & * % tr. The -ffect of malara lasts along tme, Yo.¾¾ cold easly or become rundow because of the after effects of malara* Strsagthea yourself wth Scotf w *f ztfo'vn* h bolvk sew blood and tones up your nervous system. /.a DRUGGSTS: SOe. AND $1.00. CORRESPONDENCE tems of nters! from Some of Out Surroundng TOWTJR. SHAFTSBURG. Mra. Jamfs Staft was n Landng, Monday, Mss Jfj^sj" Cuwsas was n Perry on Monday'. Mr*. «*-. lv«v'*rk was n" Perry prwpa Fr**nrh was n Davson MM AtfkM HK*ulW«h ha* g*&e *» *t*«4 fcrtan tn t'«r«mtts. ft*? «b*ft, _! losng, t u n &*»n**-*r? t^t * day tart trat'. ; J**, /*»- ****** *3 Utt*d*ttffhter, «4 *V*KflNaV *»»* b**w * Frday.' J "''&»***»** t*!*e«a «BM Mtj^M-*t«f M» tmmmb. - t «alarfbe; look* THE DAY OF THE FARMER. Useful Tller *f the Sol HM Come to Hs Own. The farmer who s not an amateur s a really ncreasng factor n to-day's lfe. n fact farmng s rapdly becomng one of the professons. We have our agrcultural schools just as we have our law schools. t s gettng to be a busness as well. Farmers have ther trusts, lke other manufacturers. t s a far cry from the New England farmer, tryng to arrange an exploded grante quarry nto a stone wal that he may have room n whch to cent of whch &re n good shape. Tbesv >3a,;t Ls crop, and tfc,at master of capfeet should prove a vast help d securng t-1 tal, scence and black earth ten foruauon whch wll he!p n the establubue frmly u our mnds the ams and obj-?ts sought n the lessors. There s no regret more htter than the one of msused early opportuntes- To thnk we have neglected to obtan the trsutnjj we mght s a btter dreg n latter lfe when lfe makes vume to us our aek. Then we say contnue your work as long as you can. Don't, nurse the foolsh dea that you are a» well e<!te*ted as parents and hence netd j«> no more. You need more educaton than (hey bad. tot the world demand* nore of vou, and you cannot veld the servce you ought unesyou **ve the preasnttoe. He who seeks to do better taa* others that wfeteb fsjls to bs lot to d# ba* n nlsd a lofty and coble purpose aed Vll succeed n t* accomplsb* DCttt. FEBKT SCHOOL. «5*3? At*. The M«e* Crawford entertaned tr, ***" Mr*. Attea Opafgler, of Tuesday e«*afttff. A very swell affar. Jar»*», *?w n auaftatavgon.satur- Have yon eeo u Pro*, jjbt artllery? S_rt- **rf *«t«t«r. t make* a note lke the 4th of Joly. *lf# -D-m^a*. who has been n Prof, (n Latn esw) Mrs* C, translate M VaJe, frater.*' &*a«?9ft *e«4>ral w««k», returned to WjAfUtofrg»M Thursday. Ctmrtes Rarrey, who hu been on MM C, F^rewel, Brother * vst n P«-ot*yv*««for two' MM 8., (asde) Brother Wstkjas, am we***, returned t*> Shaftsburg last, AlJ ^ n,^,,* bavcoeeo "conned" *«*\ - -"'» M ^ t". L Al the* cooners^bsve been **«Of*Be»r Herbert Lewe, ^f Cohoctub, wa«; 4 _._ fc '. _ -.. p th* M- tewls «t.est of and ws wle, Aunt for and several uncle, days J. Fakers! r r *»* hke Kbu * you, ^ D,,,fferB now. sbacond. F" 1 "^ JUst week. 'Geoeraly debhtated lor year*. Had feu* uvaucttf*. av;w.«n> auttoo. Was H;»'.!»out ad al ruu down. Jtrdw.'k BouJ t^rs m;m?««a well woman." - ; -rs; t:ag. -KrMtoy, Moosu*. Conu. LA1NGSBURG. Lajj;f«l)ttrg t Oct. 6, 1S»W. ; <^ Mrs. W. A. Co^mer s fc^ndng a few days n Bay Cty. H. G. Snth has recovered from las llness aufceuty to be able to rle out. Mss Bertha Throop, of LanBng, vfeted her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Charles Throop, Suuday. The movng pcture, show opened n the Perce oudug Saturday evenng and was well patronzed. Mrs. H. R. Lowery left Tuesday for a vst wth her sster and other frends at Salne aud Ann Arbor. Mr. and Mrs. Steffas, rbo have resded on the Scott farm south of town, wll move to Oho n, the near future. C Mrs. A- J- LeBar and son; of Lan n the motto on tbe blackboard ths sng, who were vstng Mr. and week. "Flowers are a blessldg p'en to Mrs. Wn. Collns last week, have the poorest lttle who wander 'ueatb the returned to ther home. vault of Heaven." Rev. EL Van Ommeren, of Mt, Pleasant, was greetng old frends n An tem box wll be placed u tbe town Frday and vsted bs daughter, Mrs. Emerson Albrght. asked to contrbute ther nsws, school balls and tbe pupa and teachers are "Mr. and Mrs. Dana Bnson and or otherwse. Tbe tems wll be collected each Tuesday nght after school any daughter Gertrude, of Lansng, vsted Mr. Benson's father and brother,. fl. and A. Benson, Sunday. thng occur log between perods of collecton wll be accepted. Mrs. Morley Zander returned to her home n St. Charles, Saturday. Her mother, Mrs. Carre Nelson was able to accompany her, beng convalescent from an llness. The annual far and chcken pe supper under the auspces of the lades ad of the M.. church was a decded success, and the socety receved somethng over f$q for ther efforts. VLLAGE SCHOOL NOTES Gathered From Exchanges Around the County. BYRON SCHOOL,. rwby do we out >.,tye mort school vstaton? You n?e most vst--oae and your presence adds to th» merest dsplayed by your cf:!dr^;. The lbrary bookp are n \-r-v, ;»n1 he- XOKKCE SCHOOL, Tbe report card* are banded Out ths week. The teachers especally reques the parents to examne tbe card care* fujy each month f there should be a fallcg off _ tbe standngs please nqure nto the matter of tbe teacher, who wll be>rjsd to explan to the par* ebts satlsfscten. Tbe new school buldng wll be ready for occupancy nest Monday moralng. The prmary pupta wlt move loto the new room and tbe grammer room pupls occupy tbe prmary room. Tbe offce f. to be ttled for lbrary deep who plows wth a tractou engne and reaps wth a ten-horse team. And between these two typos of farmers the drft s steadly toward the latter. The comc paper' does not laugh at the "granger" as frequently as t used to laugh. t wants hs subscrpton. The captalst does not foreclose mortgages on the prare farm now. He borrows money of ts owner. And, what s vastly more mportant, tbe entre country looks wth a respect borderng upon apprehenson on ths new type of Amercan who has decded vewston ralroads, trusts, and, n fact, on every subject from the "green bug" to the lecturer at hs Chautauqua. Ths rse of the farmer nto natonal sgnfcance s welcome xt vew of the nundatkugbf great ctes by mmgrants who nfsv sgnfcance only en masse. The farm s tbe nursery of ndvdualsm. f you are a eltf dweller n tbe cty send your boy there, and let hm see what t means to create wealth wth the help of nature; rather than wth tbe tcker. Too wll help mak* hm a better Amercan. The World To-Day. a conductor once. 'd hate to tell you and rectatons wll be beard n the what happened." labortorles. The conductor drew back a lttle Tbe tochers n all tbe rooms have begun a crusade aganst bad EnglUh. lect the stout man's fare, «nd made no further attempt to col Nelle Bennett, of Wnfrustn, Ont,, Bat when the stout man was about was a vstor n tbe l^erowtdate room to alght from the car the conductor's curosty was too much for hm. Monday. "Say," he asked, "what happened The pupls n tbe prmary room are when you Kd that trouble wth the nt'jdybg flowers. A very pretty sentment n connecton wth t s expressed The stout, man looked ether conductor?" back.»ubasf> SCHOOL. The debatng socety of the hgh school has elected the followng offcers: Presdent Dana Hopkns. Secretary Chrystal Ccle. Executve Commttee Mss Cavanaugh and John Seafred. Tbe foot ball team s gettng nto Sbspe under coach Dt«ty, X)7 Ann Arbor, and expect to wn tbe game next Saturday at Fen ton, wth Fenton Hgh school. Tbe Senor class wll gve a pastry sale next Saturday afternoon and evenng at Fraser's & Co.'s grocery store. A lterary program s beng prepared for Frday evenng, October 11th, at the hgh school. W. Reed, Mr, and Mrs. Peach and Mss Lulu Washburn vsted at ther clear of all the fumes and odors of respectve homea Sunaay. tobacco? How to smoke n the da-< The South sde school reports two Tbat Zante BrtHfc can b<5 *»»r<*<l wt* ng-room, the drawng-room, your f>r. Mles' NERVE 'LAST:^ Oa!» gfe. \vg properly nun*b«*rod..<un t] nc entres ths week: Edna Kellogg n the wfe's bedroom, wthout leavng a sngle tobacco smell n the ar? Well, Ttnrlr»l For b><lgestkm«e:\slly ho osrt <>! m)«t. ce.!. '1 hs s ; Utgrsde and Wlle Hltcbmott n the X)'h!<- suhodl luu '>r\.. lc»:re tu^k ytn- thrd. 'll tell you." M.*\J\A%JM. Releves sour stomach, Uor be l0:u.-d Ous'.U- of ^cttto. ''Hrre Erma Healy, Ralph Ferguson and Here the salesman took down a palptaton of the heart Dgests what you eat. small rng of platnum. are uow a'x»r. tnr*-»- n.-n-d v^l.mes "All you have to do," he sad, "s u the school roo:j». tve ^r*::*t«*r.»tr Ruth Waltz have been out of 9eaool durng the past week on account of sckness. Etbe West has re-entered school..fter beng confned to her borne for SOUR tme by sc-kucm, Moses Beefte Cconey and Blanche PeppJe vsted the schools tha week. J.AXCSUKG SCHOOL. The steam heatng cystem? duly nstalled and s gvng the best satsfacton. C«eneral hstory chss a gvng oral reports on dfferett events of Grecan hstory. Glenn Harrs read an es#ay on "The nfluence of Geography on Ecglab Lterature." The composton clagg s wrtng bographcal compostons on, "The great nuflca composers. M Chapel was conducted Frday mornng by the Senor class. Bern ce Havens read an essay on "Great thoughts and feelngs, as emboded n Lterature/' WHEN THERE WAS TROUBLE. Just What Happened Between the Fat Man and the Conductor. Tbe stout man on the back plat* form declfned to agree wth the conductor. The conductor thought, he hadn't pad hs fare. The stout man was of the contrary opnon. tbe dgestve organs cannot possbly do They exchanged harsh words over the work demanded of them t s at the matter. such antes that the stomach needs help; t demands help, and warns you by " gave you*a nckel when cot besdscbea, belchng, soar stomach, nausea and ndgeston, Ton should ar aboard," sad the stout man. " haven't taken n a nckel on ths tend to tbtft at once by takng aometbng trp," sad the conductor. that wll artnatly do the work for the The stout man grew YVT red. Ms Btoesacb, Eodo wll do thp. t * a har seemed to brstle. combnaton of natural dlgestanto and ''That's Just enough of ths,** he vegetable acds and contans tbe earn* juces found n a healthy stomach.' t s growled, " don't want to have any pleasant to take. t dgests what vou trouble wth,you. T had trouble wth est Sold by <'. M. Peacock. " was n the hosptal sx weeks," be mldly answered. Mssed the Bargan. They were well gowned. Each looked as f she could buy a par of sky* scrapers cash down. As they hopped off the street car at Exchange place, Jersey Cty; Pennsylvana ssaton, the gong announcng the departure of a boat for New York sounded. Ton should have seen them run, pretty laces, small ankles, danty slppers, whte skrts, black hosery, Cuban heels, etc The rude man of the brdge banged the lattced gates together, and. lockng them n the faces of the dvntes, turnm away wth a sarcastc grn, such as menals wear when they have the best of the proposton and show a lttle authorty. "Oh, you horrd thng!" exclamed one of the women; then she was heard to say to her companon: "We've mssed that sale of calcos at three cents a yard. had set my heart on buyng three sards to make Archbald a new dress. 'm so angry could cry or swear." A Tp to Smokers. ~ "Do you want to know how to smoke and smoke, and yet keep.the room to set ths rng over a lamp and let t get red-hot. Red-hot, t wll consume the smoke ^of a dozen cgars, keepng the ar qute clear and sweet. Wth one of these rngs n use, there s ao ground for forbddng a man to smoke anywhere. "t has long been known that platnum consumes tobacco smoke. wonder that no one ever thought of the wonderful platnum smoke-absorbng rngs before." T«nderfeet of the Ocean* Western farmer boys as«fne, sprted fellows, of good physque, hot t s a melancholy fact that most of them do not reman n the naval aeryce. Tbe desertons, whch are so dscredtable to our navy, occur chefly amoag those lads who heve never smelled salt water untl they are sent aboard a tranng shp. They are the' "tettderfeet." of the ocean, and tcnte homesckness s a ragng malady among tfrem. v#ton Transcrpt YOU WLL FND YOUR NEW FALL SUT TOP COAT, STORM COAT, HAT, GLOVES and UNDERWEAR..,.. are watng for you at our store. The styl^ s rght the prce s rght and we wll use you rght L.&.CO. 'Chxtt* a>ftf Yours for Low Prces and a Square Deal W. A. McMullen St Co. Thomas A. Edson, the great Amercan nventor, «sys: "Fully eghty per cent of the llness of manknd comes from eatng mproper food or too much food; people are nclned to over ndulge themselves." Ths s where ndcaton fnds ts begn a lug u nearly every case. Tbe stomach can dojost so much work and no more, sod wben you overload t. or wben you eat the wrong knd of food eugar BEETS. The Best Sol for Ther Producton la Heavy Clay Loam. There s a dstncton between the two sorts at beets. Far sugar producton the best enrfs are obtaned from rather heavy, well-draned and fertle clay loam sols. On lghter sander The Sugar Beet. sols the beets wll mature earler, but the yeld wll be less per acre. On suc sols the beets wll grow large but the percentage of sugar s lkely to be low. Sugar beets are not more exhaustve on the sol than other crops f the tops are left on the land and the pulp a brought' back from the factory to be fed on the farm. Plantng s done early n the sprng and the best returns are secured wth a well dstrbuted raufal- durng May, June, July and August w a farly dry weather n September a.. October. F eard T Yt l-v BJM^r**e y oar fre wth» # r* BKKB8BROTHKKS M. M\ *W THERMOSTAT. SaVea ZO per ecnt. of your coal blls. Sent out an tral. Ank.yowr dealer or send stamp /or tr*«booklet- Be*t«Bro», Thennoctat Co^KdeheWur, NVST. K» When a DETROT Stop at THE ADDSON FAMLY HOTEL Sngle Booms wad &att*n to rent by the day, wee* or montt), KATES BE %SONABA Joe stuaton s the most ConTcnfent U> tl* cty for both«noppers»bd pl»>««nrcse«k«l.. Cor. Wood wrtt tm4 Chtnlett* Ave*. Wrt* for partcular*. T«-:-pJoa* Grud RASE SOUABS T PAYS Tborong Bbred TfOBHg loflksjt tor sale fot Breedng parpotes. Maple Rdge Saoab Farm Unon 'Phone.^1 Owo«so»?«ch. MNERS _dvertl_ *out«n tll* column are chay** at tfre rue of on* cent tor each word eocn tr aertoo. No os«.lnmtkn aa*«r~»em*nt «e* ««p«ea at lepa than 16c. TbU eoluxsn U v«ry prodnef* of quck rettuna an1 can be need to advaotag* n fllnjr nany wssls. Copyal»«U bec br WedacadAJ nooa. For Sale One good yearlng hefer and sxty-fve shocks of corn stalks. Chaa. Knght. For Sale Household goods, ncludng wood stoves, tables, chars and couches. 4&41 Mrs. J. Babngton. For Sale: Two popcorn stands. Harry Mner, Corunna. 19tf For Sale or Bent: 25 acres of CORUNNA, land. Enqure of Mrs. Adelbert Mner, Coranna, Heb. 29tf.. For Sale:-A small flock of thoroughbred barred Plymouth Bocks. F.. Johnson, Corannav For Sale: A New York leather conch nearly new; wll sell at a bargan. Mch. Hngb M. Kebols, Coracn*» For Sale: 640 acre ranch stuated 2 mles from B. B. staton. Good frame boose, two barns and other out buldngs. Well watered and fenced. 90 acres n crops, sale great bargan f taken at once. Address. Geo. W. Easer, Clare, Mch. 33w4 A Certan Cure for Achng Feet. Alen's Foot*Ba*e,» powder; care* Tred, Acbaff, Sweoxag-, Swollen feet. Sample *ent rkee, aw Sample of roob-s^ax AANTABT CORXPAO. a new nttalon. Address,-All«n S. Om>.usl. LeRoy, X, Y. t seems to come Wttwl for t«to do NEAT p RNTNa PROFESSONAL. Mss H. B. Ball, M. D. SPBClAlLfSX Dseases of Women and Chldren CORUrWA, -. MtCUffttf Auorney* at Law MATflnfWwUtH OSVnoverC.X WALTEH Pecc«ek>*Dr«cw>of«. CORUNNA, - - tttcmqatt AUSTNERCBABOS Attor«t«y at H«saw» OSVe Vwmr MeMnttes A 0o.«a Ototalaf MHO, CORUNNA, -MCHGAN. E. H. BALEY, M. D. Offlee and Resdence, frst door west of brdge, : : J CORUWA, MANY GOOD THNGS M10HOAH WLLAM J* PARKER, Attorney at Law, Seldtor n Caaacary. All Und* of ejra! bnsneat tnuuaemd. to loan. Beau Estate and.toaru M*. OTCT Me-alca A Go.'s dotnlas Stot«, afksogafl OR. D.H.LAMB (Late of Unted SUt«a Army) *" Eye, Ear, Note sod Throat SpsdaJfct Olssaes accurately ad wted. thmm, StM «s 114S a. nu and 14«to440u.H. l a Satorday evenng*, S^Bt4>7dS. Otta >< by appontment. Boon* 1 sad t,' - - MGHOAJ There's no place Bfc* tfae Journal for Neat nfctoff. ^ >J» J»>> When Others Fal, Try Us **.*'"' *x. EYES TESTED] PREB. C. S. ALLSON & SON. Optcans and Jew««f<* 117 N. Washngton St Owosso. have so many good thngs n stock to tell you about that we wll take one thng at a tme, We wsh to speak to you about' the Blum & Co.'s lne of shoes. They excel any lne of warm shoes that has ever been brought to our notce. The Blum Shoe Co. are specalsts n the manufacture of warm shoes, and every number s great value and every par wll gve perfect satsfacton. Prce s wthn reach of all. Blum warm shoes run from $1.50 to $2.00, but we have some Lades' warm ^hoes as low as 75c per par. f you want comfort, remember the Blum shoe. _-«&* We have a few more pars of those 98c bargans. Yon should get a par of them before they are all sold. CURRE _ CLUTTERBUCK CORUNNA, MCHGAN :+±x*±*x

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