ffinekneg fii^^ff- ^r^mm UMET. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON COUNTY, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, JULY 25, NUMBER 29, Local Gatherings. .

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Download "ffinekneg fii^^ff- ^r^mm UMET. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON COUNTY, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, JULY 25, NUMBER 29, Local Gatherings. ."

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1 ^r^mm wm..** v, ",..m-" "»^WI»IIPM ^ >» mm town " ' *»*' -' WP BBF R^Sy "*% #.4> *» ' J* v ' ny. mutny 3J*fcVJ- '- ^4^.- >».*;» *4L >-._ :JVA* m ('!' K,. K; >>, yf. V-" 'If, \" w UMET. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON COUNTY, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, JULY 25, NUMBER 29, ffnekneg f^^ff- UOURICTBD WEEKLY BY THOMAS RKAD. ro. 1 whte. I» r Ko.l ry*, * NIMIlHMM l>»»«««l*>m>«t««h»«m«m»l««s& 9 «* #» ** «! * * *# M»««WM>H«W«l 1«(V we ;.ou Drled'ApplM... ~. PoUtoe«....».. * ''Oft «BlW7(IMMIMMMMM**tl*«tMMIM<»tMf««*«***MHtlt*NI»OMNI 4*1 aff jfs» *»»» « HMWlUm^M «»*«n J I DreMed CMekena M «. * JUTC Chcken*. ^...^, Turkeys «10 Clover 8*ed ~ f c DMMed Pork» -... ~~-fe a bsl Applet....».75 l.uo BUSINESS P0INTEK8. In Men's Shoes we hare a lne for $1.75, Congress, all sold leather counters and nsoles, at the Star Dry Goods Store. If yon want to smoke a good Cgar go to SBAVEK & Co's. * I have let ray huckleberry swamp to Mrs. Thos. Carroll. All persons are forbdden to pck wthout her consent. (28w2.) MBS. 0. W. HAZE. If you want a Chld's Shoe call at the Star Dry Goods Store. * For Sale Reasonably. A Bt; Rapds wagon. Inqure of R. C. AULD, Pnckney, Mch. Farmers, at the Star Dry Goods Store you can get cash for your a#gs. * Notce. Havng leased my whortleberry swamp to the famly of John Dockng, I hereby forbd all other persons trespassng thereon. CHARLES LOVE. (27w3) WANTED: In the Star Dry Goods Store, a salesman. * Farm For Sale or Rent. One me west of Pncknev. Lately the possesson of G. B. Hncbev. Possesson gven mmedately,good chance to put n 35 acres of heads. THOMAS BIRKETT. Brkett, May 15, (19tf.) Sx bare York Soap for 25 cents at Tbe Star Dry Goods.Store. * For Sale. A farm contanng 120 aor^s. Good sol, fne buldngs, well watered and good orchard. {"Stuated one mle east ol Gregory on the Grand Trunk ralroad. For further nformaton nqure of I. S. DAVIS, Gregory, Mch. Sx bars Bouncer Soap for 25 cents at the 'Star Dry Goods Store. * Hammocks. Our enormous sacrfce sale of Hammocks at wholesale and we have secured the beneft. We can sell you a good 13x6 ft hammock for only 85 cts., and the test Mexcan for only $1.25, savng you over 40 per cent Call and be convnced that t s a fact. GEO. W. SYKKS & Co. * All papers stopped when the tme expres unless arrangements are made for a contnuance. We shall strctly abde by ths rule. Local Gatherngs. Mss Nelle Dolan s vstng n Detrot. Cash pad for eggs at the Star Dry Goods Store. * * L. H. Beebe of Mnnth, was n town Wednesday. Rock your baby n one of SYKKS' Hammocks. * k Wrght was n Detrot last on busness. ^jballat Shaver & Co's. for bottom prees on Shoes. * J. W. Harrs s attendng the races n Detrot ths week, *. An entre new lne of Whte Goods just receved at GEO. W. SYKES & CO'S, Mrs. Jones of Detrot, s vstng her sster, Mrs. Ferry Blunt Brng your eggs to the Star Dry ods Store and get cash for them. * D. Bennett s workng n South ths week. SYKES has a corner on the Hammock busness and no mstake. * Local news s at a premum n ths vcnty jnst now. Choce fall cream Cheese at The Star pry Goods Store. * We would lke to hear from all of our correspondents agan. Mrs, L. C. Bennett s vstng relatves n Hamburg. Get one of SYKKS 1 Hammocks for your beat grl. * Postmaster Fck of Gregory, was n town last Saturday. Brng your eggs to the Star Dry Goods btore ana get cash for them. * Geo. W. Stewart s the new postmaster at Brghton. Best shllng Percale only 7 cts. at GEO. W. SYKKS & Co's. * Mrs. Charles Balty and chldren are vstng Lansng frends. Call at Tbe Star Dry Goods Store for Shoes. * Mrs. R. B. Wheeler of Detrot, s tbe guest of Mrs. H. M. Colby. Best bakng powder deal yet, at GEO. W. SYKES & Co's. * J. E. Forbes and famly are vstng frends n Detrot ths week. At all tmes you can get cash for eggs at the Star Dry Goods Store. * Eugene Campbell was n Detrot frst of the week on busness. Remember we are glad to receye news of nterest at any tme. Sbaver & Co's, lne of Shoes s unequalled. * Bernard Lynch has added a new forge to hs blacksmth shop. Mlan people are buldng a boat and club house at Hamburg Juncton. Fnest lne of Cgars n Pnckney at SHAVER & Go's. * Read the probate notce of Hal Perry, deceased, n another column. Mr. Maron Alley of Dexter, s vstng frends and relatves n ths place. 20c. buys a pound of good Smokng Tobacco at SHAVER & Co's. * Mrs. Fred Melvn of Howell, vsred her parents n ths vllage over Sunday. Mrs. Belle Collns and son of Hastngs, are vstng frends n ths vllage. W'e fnd new evdence every day for our $2.25 lne of Lades' Kd Shoes at The Star Dry Goods Store. * Mrs. L. Kennedy and daughter Belle are vstng frends n fcowlervlle ths week. County clerk Stowe s exercsng hs muscle harvestng hs wheat on hs farm n Iosco. I have a fne lne of fly nets and lap robes whch 1 am sellng very cheap. Call and see them. THOS. CLINTON. *' E. M. Fohey of ths place, s telegraph operator at McBan, Mssauke Co., Mch. Mrs. J. M. Kearney and Mss Tlle Brown are vstng frends n Jackson ths week. Remember that the propretors of the Star Dry Goods Store wll pay cash for eggs, * LaRue & Davs wll run a shootng gallery n connecton wth ther restaurant Rather quet n town just now. Farmers are busy gatherng n the golden gran. George Green s workng n a barber shop at Chelsea. He s a frstclass workman. Mr. Joseph Ferguson s vstng frends and relatves n Fowlerylle and Webbervlle. Read what D..1. McKeeby, tbe general blacksmth, has to say n hs new adv. n ths ssue. Get some spendng money by brngng your eggs to the Star Dry Goods Store and get the cash for them. * Pnckney has purchased a fre engne, Chelsea Herald. Guess yon are mstaken, Bro. Allson. Mr. Sdney Bangs of the Ann Arbor Conner, vsted hs sster, Mrs, V. C. Bennett, frst of the week. R, E. Fnch s attendng the G. A. R. reunon at Jackson ths week. Mss Myrte Fnch accompaned hm and wll vst frends and relatves n that oty. Mrs. C. Lynch of South Lyon, was the guest of her mother, Mrs. P. Smth, n ths vllage over Sunday. The confrmaton class of St. Mary'a church wll receve holy communon Ang. 11th, at 8 o'clock mass. Messrs. Beoj. Allen, Wll Monks, E. E. Mann and Bert Green are attendng the races at Detrot ths week. We are prepared to do job work n all of ts branches at lvng prces. Call and get prces and see samples. Bshop Foley of Detrot, wll admnster tbe sacrament of Confrmaton at St. Mary's church Aug. 26th. Mr. L. F. Rose and famly of Bay Cty, are vstng ther many frends and relatves n ths place and vcnty. Mrs. T. Grmes s recoverng from a snraned ankle, whch she receved by fallng from a sde-walk a few days ago. Read Wll Curlett's new adv. n ths ssue. Durng tbe month of August he wll sell curtan goods and fxtures at one-ffth off. Rev. 0. B. Thurston has receved a call to preach n the Cong'l church n ths place for another year, but has not accepted as yet. Mr. R. D. Glenn, who won the prze n the whstlng contest at Ypslant recently, now challenges the State of Mchgan for an equal. Father Consdne wll be at St. Mary's church from Aug. 5th to Aug. 11th, to nstruct the chldren who are to receve ther frst holy w communon. Perry Bl unfa'applcaton "for a penson has been accepted and he expects hs money n the near'future.- Hs many frends wll be pleased to hear of hs good fortune. Mr. Hugh Clark,' who lyes three mles south of ths vllage, has just completed a well that s 203 feet deep. He wll have a fne wnd mll erected to run the samo.t Thos. Dolan, the effcent clerk n Geo. W. Sykes & Co's. store, s vstng frends and relatves n Detrot ths week. R. H. Teeple s actng as clerk durng hs absence. Remember tbe Sunday school conventon at the M. E. church to-morrow (Frday) begnnng at 10 o'clock a. m. All are cordally nvted to attend and take part n the dscussons. Mr. J. E. Krkland and Mss Anne Sales were marred at the home of the brde's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Sales, n Unadlla, on Monday last. The DISPATCH extends congratulatons. Our genal clother, F. Wrght, s bound to make room for hs large wnter stock of clothng, whch wll arrye shortly, by sellng all of hs summer stock at very low prces. Read hs new adv. n another column. Messrs. F. A. Sgler and J no. Mc- Gunness of ths place, left on Monday mornng for Dakota, where they Wll vst frends and vew the country. Dr. Wll Watts accompaned them as far as Jackson, Neb., where he has gone n vew of locatng. Andrew D. Grmes, who was recommended for postmaster of Stockbrdge, by Congressman Brewer, has receved hs appontment and wll enter upon hs dutes September frst Mr. Grmes' many frends n ths place wll be pleased to learn of hs good luck. Orn Star' has sold the Lvngston Republcan to Geo. Barnes, formerly prncpal of the hgh schools of Howell. Whle we regret to lose Bro. Star from our mdst, we heartly welcome Prof. Barnes, and hope that the Republcan may be kept up to the standard that t has been n the past. Frank S. Buckley, D. D. S., of Chelsea, Mch., has establshed a dental offce n the Montor House n ths vllage, and wll vst hereon Wednesday of each week for the purpose of dong dental work n all of ts branches. Those n need of any thng n hs lne wll fnd hm a frst-class workman as well as a gentleman to deal wth. Emly B. Vealey, wfe of Frank M. Vealej, a brakeman who was klled by the cars near tbe depot n Brghton last Aprl, has commenced sut aganst the D M L. & N. ralroad company for $50,000 damages. Brghton Ctzen. Word has just been receved from England that Robert Peach of Green Oak, who suddenly dsappeared from Detrot a month or so ago after havng sold some stock for P. Stand lck, has arrved at hs old home there. It was thought that be had been foully dealt wth by Detrot thugs, but ths explans the mystery. Brghton Argus. A crcular s now beng sent out offerng a handsome engravng of Washngton or Garfeld on recept of 25 cents. The person who answers ths catch notce wll receve, n case be wants a portrat of Washngton, a 2 cent stamp, and f he s desrous of seeng an engravng of Garfeld a 5 cent stamp s sent He cannot say he has been defrauded, as tbe work n both cases s excellently engraved. Durand Express. It wll pay you for the trouble t costs to fle your home paper. No volume n your lbrary wll afford more pleasure, more proft,..more lastng beneft. It bolds dates of local events wh:h you cannot obtan elsewhere, marrages, obtuares, notces, etc. In short your paper s a hstory of the world n whch you and your frends lve, and also occasonally remnds you that you are a year or two behnd n your subscrpton. Every nhabtant of ths state s enttled to a bounty of three cents each for tbe kllng of Englsh sparrows. In presentng n lots of not less than ten, the sparrows or heads Thereof, to the town, cty or vllage clerk where such sparrows were klled, tbe clerk wll count and destroy; and ssue to the clamant a certfcate of the amount due hm, and on the presentaton of such certfcate to the county clerk, an order wll be drawn on the county treasurer for the amount, to be pad out of tbe ncdental fund of such county. Followng s a synopss of the mportant provsons of the new fsh law: The catchng of trout, salmon and graylng s lawful only from May 1st to September 1st, and then only by hook and lne. Bass may be caught at any tme, but only by hook and lne. You cannot lawfully spear them at any tme. The use of explosve substances n catchng any knd of fsh s unlawful. Spearng of fsh exceptng mullet, grass pke, red sdes and suckers s prohbted from March 1st to July 1st. The use of any speces of net exceptng dp nets n catchng mullet, etc., s unlawful at all tmes. A volaton of any of the provsons of ths law s punshable by a fne of not less than $5 nor more than $100 and costs, or mprsonment for 30 days f fne s not pad. The Grand Trunk s a great leveler among ralroads. There s talk of a connecton n ths cty between the Grand Trunk and tbe Cncnnat, Jackson & Macknac, and also that the Grand Trunk wll be pushed on from ths pont to the west makng a short lne to Chcago. Mr. Oakes, presdent of the Northern Pacfc, refers n a recent statement to the afflaton between the two lnes. He sad that connecton wth tbe Grand Trunk was tbe great nducement on the part of the Northern Pacfc management "to buy the Wsconsn Central. By that road we got close connecton wth the Grand Trunk. We desred closer relatons wth that road and have now got them. You see by these connectons we have a road straght across the contnent from Portland, Me., Halfax, Nova Scota, and Montreal on the St Lawrence to the Pacfc coast Ths gves us a powerful system of roads." We have great fath that Jackson wll be an mportant pont n the Grand Trunk system, not only for an east and west, but also for a great north and south lne* -Jackson Patrot The prelmnary work of the State Far to be held at Lansng, September 9,10. 11, 12 and 13, s progressng rapdly. There are now eghty-fve men employed, and 1,000,000 shngles and 500,000 feet of lumber wll be requred n tbe erecton of addtonal buldngs. Ten acres wll be devoted to exhbton of machnery. There wll be 3,600 feet n length of horse stalls, 3,100 of cattle stalls, 1,200 feet each for swne and sheep. The Machnery Hall wll have an area of 8,500 square feet, and the Carrage Hall 6,500. Nne hundred feet of water mans are now lad n the grounds. The New Grand Stand, 200 feet long, s a model for that purpose. Offcers are provded for the telegraph and telephone systems and for the offcers; The Race Track, seventy-fve feet n wdth, s ene of the best n any state. The grounds are dry n any weather, wth abundance of shade trees, and cannot be excelled. C. G. Jewett of Howell, was awarded tbe contract for hearng the new court house at a' cost of 12,993. We glean the followng from the Lvngston Repa blcan: " It s to be a steam heatng apparatus, accordng to the plans and specfcatons furnshed by the archtect, A. E. French of Detrot. The boler used wll be a large 50-nch dameter by 14 feet n length, horzontl boler, wth 53 three-nch tubes. Everythng n connecton wth the work s specfed to be of the fnest materal and workmanshp. Mr. Jewett beng the lowest bdder was awarded the contract. Whle the number of bdders was not large t s a fact that the two from Detrot represent tbe twe oldest and most thoroughly establshed houses n the busness n the state. Webster & Meath are among tbe lowest bdders for steam heatng n Detrot, and t s a credt to our tojvnsman, Mr. Jewett, that he fnds hmself able to compete wth these older houses." EAST PUTNAM. From onr Correspondent. Harvestng s nearly fnshed. Mss Emma Hcks s n Detrot ths week. Mss Myrta Hall vsted Anderson frends last week. Nelle and Grace Lake are guests of Forest Hll frends. Msses Ette and Lola Place way ju?e vstng frends n St. Lous^Mrcl. Msses Flota and ^Nettle Hall and Llle and Alce^Bfown vsted n Pettey s v llejastfrday. PLAINFIELO,?*rom our Correspondent. Mr. C. Ingels started for Ithca last Thursday, where he wll vst relatves and frends. Whle E. D. Collard was n the saw mll last Frday a log rolled over, catchng hs foot and brusng t qute badly.' He s slowly recoverng. Whle Mrs. Voegts wa3 washng for Mrs. J. Ingels last Monday she ran a needle n her hand and broke t off, whch made a very panful wound. Messrs. «. G. Toppng and W. Worth challenged Messrs. C. Ingels and F. Collard to a champonshp game of croquet to be played on the Planfeld croquet grounds on Wednesday, July 17th, at 7 p. m. sharp, for a wager of the cgars for all of the players, to be pad for by the sde that lost the game. The game was called at the apponted tme and a vast concourses)f people assembled to behold the contest They played for about twenty-fve mnutes and at last Toppng, Collard and Ingels were^oyers whle Worth made several errors and-^was so unfortunate as not to get through^ the fourth or center arch. Toppng ht tne^sjtake by a rasshot and had to remove hs ball; Collard and Ingels also ht the stake, therefore the game was decded n favor of Collard and Ingels, when the crowd gave them great applause. The tme was thrty mnutes. r w- f a JM 1' - \ * \ r t I, w / ' * ~"53*Wf& "* *

2 V+ I'm r \ PINCK5ET V><» A. D. BSXSCTT, PuWsber. MICHIGAN Ha T j Hussen (Joul Khan. The acton of the ChrosC'government n establshng^"at Canton the largest mnt jjrtfo world for the conage o'f^sttvcr las created great alarm ^n'mexco. For centures the Mexcan dollar has been the standard con of tho Chnese, and n fa^t of Asatc commerce, and the purpose of the Chnese gq.y_e_'nueut locon u qwn slver wll, t s thought, result n drvng the Mexcan dollar out of that country. Accordng to the leadng fnancal journal of Mexco the effect must be that the Chnese government wll buy ts slver n the Unted States, thereby deprvng Mexco of an mportant artcle of commerce. It s not questonable that the acton of the Chnese government may prove a serous matter to the slver mnng ndustry of Mexco, but ths wll largely depend upon what efforts and nducements the mners of Amercan slver are wllng to offer to get the Chnese trade. In busness affars Chna s lookng for the best advantages, regardless of ther source, and f there s a competton between tho. Unted States and Mexco the country that can offer Chna the best terms wll sell that country the most slver. The secretary of agrculture has just establshed a new dvson n hs department, charged wth ye duty of edtng the reportsr-rmd bulletns ssued by the dfferent dvsons of the agrcultural bureau. Much complant has beerf found wth a majorty of the publcatons ss led from ths department due to tho fact that they! have been prepared by scentfc men for scentfc eyes. In consequence, much that was valuable and ntended for the general publc has been msdrected. Secretary Rusk has very properly determned that as the agrcultural department; was created prmarly for the farmers of the country, the varous bulletns should be prepared n the planest possble language so that every man who reads them may understand ther mport. The new secretary of agrculture understands hs busness and ntends to make hs department somethng more than an expermental staton for the entertanment of scentfc gentlemen wth pet hobbes and thoeres. NEWS SUMMARY. MANY LIVES LUST, A Valley n West Vrgna Sw«pt Flood. by Great Datnajj* Dona to Property. The greatest dsaster that ever befell Lttle Kanawha valley n West Vrgna came the ot.e* nght n tho shape of a terrble doud burst, whch has completely flooded the country, destroyng many lves, carryng otf thousands of dollars lu property aud runng the crops lor many mles. The deluge fe.l la the vcnty <f Parkers burg about dusk and contnued to fall n torrents dong much danag-.* a the cty. The worst 01 the atorn struck the lower sde of the Kanawha, hllou' small trbutares fom bank to bunk and endng n the worst tood wthn recollecton QL the oldest Jnhuot. uu. h three hours the Kanawna rased sx feet aud ran out wtn such veloc ty that t earned every huk before t. At ths pout thousands of logs and a uumber of boats went out or were sunk. Three persons from Parkersburg were drowned.,abo\e l'arkersburg the destructon s much greater. Vllages n the Bg Tygart valley have be?n swept away, and crops and lve s.ock destroyed. Eleven lves were lost ~.. DAKOTA'S WHEATCROP. Tho Yeld Wll be About 30, Bushels Short. berg, w o two other chldren of Mrs. Smth were n.ured. one of whom wll d>>. The unlercr h.s been lvng wth Mrs. Smth for about a year as her husband, but t "s the 'general bel.eftht they were not marred. The cause of the tracedy s not known, although t s statel that Rosenberg has complaned about the way be has been used n money matters by the woman. Koscnberg met hs death n a pecular and unntent onal manner whle tryng to escape. In scalng a fence at the end of the lane, through whch le ran after lump ng through the wndow, the doctor thnks that he fell on a ple of ralroad sleepers, lyng besde the Ftch burg tracks, and struck hs head on a spke, whch fractured hs skull and nstantly klled hm. Dr. Durell says there s no doubt that Rosenberg was crazy. For Farmers' Beneft. Among the recent publcatons ssued by the department of agrculture s a sxteenpate pamphlet, farmers' bulle n No. 1, emanatng trom the oftlce of experment Btatons of ths department, Prof. Oatwater drector, whch tells what the experment sttons are, what they do and bow they do t. From ths bulletn t s learned that the magntude of ths scentfc work undertaken for the beneft of the farmers of the Unted- States far outstrps uny other naton n the world, aud that, although ths lne of scentfc work was be gun n ths country only fourteen years a.eo, many of the statons have already saved to the farmers more than the entre cost of ther mantenance by the result of ther nvestgatons n a sngle lne of work. A very large edton of ths bulletn has be^n ssued n antcpaton of a wdespread demand for the valuable nfotmaton thus compressed nto a few pages. _... An Electrcal Dsturbance. A heavy wnd and ran storm whch vsted EvnnsvUe, Ind., July 14, dd much damage. Numerous electrc lght wres were blown down, chargng the pools of wa'er and buldngs wth the current. Fre a foot hgh was emtted n many places, causng an alarm to be sounded. The fre department responded, and beng unaware of the condton of thngs, rushed nto what was almost certan de.th. Horses and fremen alke were knocked down by the electrcty. Ctzens rushed u and met a smlar fate and for a tme exctement ran hgh. When the current was shut off,over a do/en persons were found unconscous, but ther lves were saved. Several of tho fremen, however, at last accounts were sad to l } n a precarous condton. Defes Bsmarck. The Swss government's reply to Chan cellor Bsm.rck's demand that socalsts and other objectonablo characters shall not bo harbored n the Httlo republc, 's couched n dgnfed but defant language, «nd nssts th.t refugees shall be treated as they deserve, and that the Swss government was justfed n expellng tho German polce offcer from the country. The reply has caused surprse, f not consternaton, among the Germans, and Emperor Wllam has cautoned Bsmarck not to aggravate the dffculty by any ll-tmed movement. Brckyard! Boutfbt. A Jont stock ooa>p*ny has beea organ zed n London, whch U of the nature of a trust, for the purchase of (he prncpal brckyard* u the Unted State*. The negotatons have already been practcally concluded wth George W. Moore, a well known Mchgan attorney, to far as the brckyards of the cty f Detrot are concerned, the Knglsh syndcate agreeng to purchase the plant and materal of the several yards there for about *d00,000. The propostons made nclude the real estate and good wll of each frm sellng out. The brckyards of Detrot are sad to have uu annual aggreguto capacty and output ot >OAOU,000 brck at from *6 to *V a thuusuud, the yearly busness amountng to over *40d,00u. Ths uptal combnatoa wll be of an entrely dfferent character to that recently organsed to operate the Amercan breweres. The plan of the brckyard trust s to extngush the smaller yards and concen rate the busness n one or two large yards. New and mproved machnery U contemplated whch wll produce brck at a reduced prce. The syndcate wll take charge of the Detrot brckyards wthn 30 days accordng to the agreements made. Agrculture n Auatrala. In December of last year the department of agrculture receved from ts chef secretary s oftlce at Brabaue, (Queensland, Australa, a comtnun caton requestng the department to nomnate to that government a sutable person to be apponted as nstructor n agrculture. Secretary Husk has apponted Prof. Edward M. Shelton of Manhattan, Kansas, to the poston, and so nformed the Australan government. Prof. Shelton has for many years been professor of prac - tcal agrculture n the Kansas state agrcultural cullege. He has also been connected wth the Mchgan agrcultural cobege and engaged n teachng and pravtcng agrculture under the auspces of the Chnese gov Tho wheat cro> of Dakota s?.0,00,\000 Hs excellency Hadj Hussen Goul bushels short. The total producton lor the terrtory cannot, under the best pos sble condtons from uow untl harvest, Khan, mnster plenpotenrary and envoy extraordnary from Persa to exceed,0,o\<0,w>o bushels, aud to put t th.t hgh s a lber.l estmate. The greatest the Unted States, s the frst representatve who was sent by the Persan detrment to a success.ul crop thb year has been the exceedngly dry season, and only along the streams wll there be any ernment. Secretary Kusk says that he beleves I J rof. bhelton s the best man avala government to ths country. Hadj crops at all. Hundreds ot acres were sowu lor the second tme. It s lkely that ble n the Unted States for the poston, Hussen Goul Khan s a natve Persan prnce aad was born n the cty the gr. n growu wll not tll 500 cars. resent ths country. outsde of the valey of the Red rver all and s confdent that be wll credtably rep of. Teheran n 18->'. He s the ton of In Nefson ount.v, famously prolfc, wheat wll not.ved as much gran as was Money Wanted. the late prme mnlser of Persa and seeded. Kamsey s bare, except n the mmedate vcnty of Devl s lake, and n the gneer corps, superntendent of publc Leut. Col. John M. Wlson of the en and re eved hs educaton n the captal of the empre. Ho entered the sol of whch has htherto b< en regarded as annual report to the chef of eugueers. famous Turtle Mountan regon, the rch buldngs aud grounds, has submtted hs drought-proof, tho earta, succumbed, Snce the openng of the Washngton servce of the government at an early and there wll be but lttle monument l~'i,^71 people have ascended t. age and some years afterward was apponted presdent of the court of juscfc the eevators are closng rp and the The estmates for the next fscal year wheat for export n that secton. The executve manson has been kept n bucethe man lne of the Natonal Pa good repar. tce, and sent to Ispaham, one of the cdutry trbutary to Bsmarck s as barren are: Salares of employes, #52,3t>0; mprovements s.nd care of publc grounds, as a sandhll. The Jm rver valley wll the largest ctes ot Persa, where hs barely feed ts people. The cry of famne *lfr..v>tk>; C1 * r «f executve manson, re admnstraton gave great satsfacton. that was rased last wnter n the western pars and fuel, $-'W,(KX); lghtng exaeutve part of Walsh county wll fnd ts echo all manson and publc grounds, $15,7.^8 50; Subsequently he was promoted to the over the terrtory the comng wnter. repars to wuterppes, *V>00; department mnstry of fnance, but hs nterest n. Asde from ths mpovershment of the telegraph hues, *O,000; total. *.'J2l,^ 50. people by the falure of the whe.t, there s For the Wasbugtou monument $11,000 foregn poltcs and n dplomacy another dutger, whch wll be felt almost addtonal s asked. caused hm to retre from fnance and to as severely, and Unt s the w..nt of fodder for the stjck. The oat crop s bad, and the Order T» v 19r'' enter the mnstry for foregn affars. meadows away from the rver bottoms are Maj. Warner, commander-n-chef of the He was apponted consul general to as parched us the jra re. Not flonewll (J. A. K., has sstted general order No. 10, ths whole terrtory be the sufferer, but a n whch he urges all the (). A. It. posts of Inda n the year ISS,"). From ths offce ho was re aled and sent to the trp through Montana reveals the same the cotrhtry to send as large delegatons as sta'eof attars. The range cattle wll not..possble to the natonal encampment at fnd enough to lve on untl cold weatnef Mlwaukee. The day for the parade s set Unted States. Ho has tendered hs aud a promnent ruhroad offcal says that for August '.'<", and the announcement s all the extr. cars of the Northern Pacfc made that no one wll be allowed to partcpate but members of the G. A. U. and the resgnaton and wll soon leave the and Mantoba roads haye-eon ordered to country on account of nsdous and Montana to pull ou.t-"tfe steers as soon as Sous of Veterars.' the lack of food-necesstated a reducton n - unpleasant remarks about the Shah numbersjo/ the range stock. GENERAL. and hmself n Amer an newspapers. The secretary of the treasury has, nformed Wllam W. Lang, consul at Ham """"A MASSACHUSETTS FIEND. burg, who asks that hs personal household He Murders a Whole Famly. The effects be admtted to entry wthout examnaton, hat the effects of consuls are subject to the same requrements of law and Trouble Ascrbed to Money Mutters. regulatons us the effects of other persons A horrble tracedv svas enacted n lomcrvlle, near loston, < n the 1-.th nst, The partment s wthout authorty to grant hs arrvng n ths country, and that the de vctms arc Mrs. Catherne Smth, aged 4.">, request. her son Tho.nas, auvl 14, and the perpetrator ot the terrble <le<.:d Augustus Kosenlege, New \ or.<, has taken the l-.d.nburgh. I. Mapes, a graduate of Columba col unversty medal lor procency n the study of anatomy. Hs ratng was t)a per cent* of the avalable marks. Douglass Kwol, also u graduate of Culumbacollege, s'ood thrd n the class, hs percentage beng VA. The next meetng of the natonal educa tonul assocaton w.11 be held u St. Paul, Mnn. The boler of a portable saw mll exploded at Washngton Court House, Oho, the other mornng. Two men were nstantly klled and eght "others njured. New Jersey prohbtonsts have nomnated George Lauont of Hound Brook for governor. The secretary of war has ssued a letter to all the department commanders askng them to report all cases of tresspass upon mltary reservatons. It has always been a controverted subject, and Secretary Proctor thnks that the tme has come when a trespass' upon the reservatons should be legally construed. Msssspp republcans want to fuse wth the democrats for members of the legslature and county offcers. W. H Putnam, the great grandson o Gen. Israel Putnam of revolutonary fame, ded n Brooklyn, Conn., recently of progressve paralyss of the bran, aged ">. At the recent dedcaton of Gen. Putnam's monument the deceased was the most promnent fgure. An applcaton has been receved at'the war department from ctzens of Alaska for the locaton of a detachment of troops u that terrtory,... v Presdent, Harrson through the state department sent a dspatch to Dom Pedro, emperor of Brazl, congratulatng hm on hs escape from the assassn's bullet. Westnghouse of Pttsburg says he s gong to sue all the electrc lght com- 'bunes of the Unted States for takng advantage of the benefts of a patent of whch ho s the sole owner. Ths nventon s of the utmost mportance to these companes, and f they lose" the sut, the fnancal loss wll not only nvolve hundredsof thousands of dollars, but the companes wll also lose the advantage of the nventon aud be forced to use another system more expensve and less practcal. The WAb'sh car shops at Wabnsh, Ind., Were destroyed by fre the other nght, at a loss of *10U.000. Col. J. M. Wlson has been apjonted superntendent of the mltary academy at West Pont. John B. Morford. superntendent of the Canada Southern dvson of the Mchgan Central ralroad at St. Thomas, Out., has been arrested for assault on and malcous arrest of John Smth, a. farmer's son of Kngsmll, Ont., who was arrested under nstructons from Morford, June'JJS, charged wth Bellng lquor on the staton platform at St. Thomas. Smth was hurred off to the lockup, whero he remaned tr hours, und was then taken before a magstrate, who at once lberated hm, refusng to hear the case. The cotton crop n Texas haj been serously damaged by heavy runs. KThree men were klled and a dozen njured b y the exploson of a boler n the Stone lumber and plannj 'mll n Chcago the ether mornng. A bff haul of counterfeters was made at Dayton, Oho, the other nght Mayor Grant or New York has sent a request to 500 promnent persons, representng»1,500,000. to be present at a conference, July '45, whch wlt decde whether or not a Krund exposton wll be held n that cty n 1HU2, to commemorate the dscovery of Amerca. John McGregor of Pttsburg left hs wfe and two chldren desttute. The poor wfe was so crazed that she drowned her chldren and then herself. At a crcus performance n Mlford, Mass., the other nght, two sectons of seats gave w;.y. Nearly 1,000 people fell n the crash, some of whom were serously but none fatally njured. At the meetng of the executve board of the K. of L. n Chcago, a few days ago, t was decded to hold the next general assembly n Atlanta, begnnng Nov. l. It s rumored that a strong combne s beng formed, all labor uuons but the brotherhood of locomotve eugueers untng for defense. A Phladelpha syndcate has purchased COO acre* uf South Dakota land, at tm per jcre. and wll utlse t for manufacturng purposes. The democratc state conventon met n Jackson, MLs.,.'uy. 17, nomnated John M. Stone for govern r, flled the tcket,and passed resolutons ud> rsng the natonal democratc plaform of 1S3S, repudatng all sectonal feelng, prasng Gov. Lowry for hs am prze-rng atttude, nvtng mmfgru'ou. and deprecatng all trusts und combnes. The superntendent of census has apponted Dr. Davd T. Day, expert and specalst, to take charge of tho subject of mnes and mung for the eleventh census. Three men wore klled by foul gas whne cleanng out a cesspool n Lncon, Neb., the other d Three mners were klled and -0 njured n a rulwuy wreck near Shamokn, Pa., the other day. ' The Standard Ol company has been dened the prvlege ot constructng a ppe lne t J the center of Chcago. A law sut has just been settled n Le'rngton, Ky., whch has been before the court snce The costs n the case amounts to $1,000,000. Over 2,r>00 sgnatures have been receved to the Soux treaty. Gen. Crook says l,.00 more are requred, and he thnk3 they wll be obtaned. The Englsh syndcate has an cpton on the Mnneapols rourng mlls untl July 2o. They are to be captalzed, f bought, at $10,000,000. Fred J. Seymour, manager of the Amercan alumnum company of Fndlay, O., ded July 2.% and the secret of makng alumuum ded wth hm. Eleven house* were wnshed away by floods at Juncton Cty, Texas, thaotl.er day, and several lve? wore lost. Heavy rans caused the Schuylkll rver to ovenlow ts banks. Immense damage was done. A tornado destroyed nearly every buldng n the vllage of Prnceton, Oho, tho other day. The report that Secretary Hlane Is soon to resgn, s emphatcally dened by that gent eman. Actng Secretary Batchelder has decded that under the terms of the law, Chnese cooles cannot puss through ths country as toursts. The strke at Carnege's works near Pttsburg, has been settled. The terms of settlement'"are not known, but t s understood that both sdes have made concessons. A cloud burst occurred n the mountan north of Fort Kobnson, Neb., tte other mornng and sx persons were drowned. Itumored that an Fnglsh syndcate s negotatng for H. II. Warner's patent medcne busness. Major Herman Krabe, chef of the mal dvson of the treasury department, has resgned. The Ots steel company of Clevoland, Oho, has been formed n[ > an Englsh company, wth ju,f)00,0*k) capul.- Alphonse Hart of Oho has been a}>pont. ed solctor of the nternal revenue bureau, FOREIGN. A mnn was arrested n London the other day, who clamed to bo t)e man who has been commttng the murders n the Whtechapel dstrct. He makes a somewhat startlng confesson, but the authortes take, but lttle stock u t. An attempt was made to assassnate Dom Pedro, emperor t.f Brazl, us he was leavng a theatre n lo Janero. The would-be assassn has been nrrested. An mposng monument to the late Emperor Frederck was unveled a- Hraunbels a few days ugo. Prncess Augusta, sster t the Queen of Denmark, ded n Copenhagen a few davs ago. "Jack the Kpper,"' the fend who has commtted so many murders n the Whtechapel dstrct, London, has notfed tho authortes that he s about to murder several more women. One woman was found dead and horrbly tnut.lated u ths dstrct the other n^ht, provng that the v'lan means what he says. A collson occurred at Grenoble, France, between a passenger tran and,a fresjht tran on the Pars, Lyons t Medterranean ralroad. Twenty persons were klled or njured. Volent storms have caused great loss of lfe and property n Austra-Hungary ths month. The emperor of Chna hs ssued an edct orderng the buldng' of the Tung- Chow ralway. Court crcles are talkng about the converson of the Empress Augusta Vctora to the Catholc church. She made a profess on of fath before Abbe JKad.ewsk, who s attached to tho household of Prnce Kud/.wll. Count Hessehvell, the empress' grand marshal, hmself a Catholc, wtnessed the ceremony n company wth Prnce ladzwll. The emperor had prevously been apprsed of-her ntenton. New York Market*.. Flour quet but steady; fne, S1 00( ; superfne, $2 H0;«J3 05; Mnnesota extra, $'J.5//.1) :t5. Wheat Quet and steady; No J red cash, 87c. Corn Dull; No 2 mxed, 4y,S,c. Oats Quet; No 2 mxed, 27c. Pork Quet; new mess, tl3fa> Lard- Quet. #()65. Hutter Dull; western creamery fancy, lt:@exc Chcose Dull; G(«:7\c. Eggs-Quet* 14^ 14%c. Chcago Lve Stock Market. Hogs Lght grades, 14 4a(81 to; rough packng, @4 2>; mxed lots, *4 35(^ 4 55; heavy packng and shppng lots,»4!0( Cattle Market strong; natve beeves hgher, *H 50(rt>4 HO; cows, 1 75 H 20; stockers, $2@a 16; Texans,»2 50¾ a 50. Sheep Market stedv; muttons,» S0fl{.j 20; lambs, (4 7a(7jM; Texans, $3 25 m 10. Chcago Prodncft Markot. Wheat-Steady, 80( >S0} s o. Corn &V/c. ooats, 22^ 2^a Pork-fll Jfctf. Lard $<J.32> c. Balls wtd T*re/TOl 1 am not awsre that the natural ty of the Irshman proper to that humorous mxture of metaphor* eaaaonly known as the "buv' and that, pf the bcotchmantoadry and teree prouaty of dalogue, have ever been auecdotally contrasted. But the two nstance* followng recur to my mnd, and were personal experences. On the frst oecaaon, Juat after the baccalaureate examnaton n Dt 1 was drvng down on a jauntng car Borne frends to the races at the Curra Kldure. As we would say o Ireland came on to run very h>rd;" as wou sad n Amerca, "there was a heavy ranstorm;" and on reachng tho frst roadsde nu I told the drver to halt, and a* we, hs p ssengers, jumped from the car, I sad, we havng the comparatve shelter of umbrellas; 'Come n quck Denny; you must be wet" -Fath, your honor," was hs ready answer, "f I was at wet nsde as I am outsde 1 would be as dry as u bone!" On the second occason alluded to-i wa» travelng by stage coach tnrougo a Hj ' land dstrct of Scotlaud wth my father clergyman, by the way - and managed te porunly to escape from the mmedate teruul supervson. Havng done so, found myself n contguty wth two cattle drovers, whose conversaton aaounttd. vrtualv to the followng: "Eh, bonal', and boo ure ycj" "Weel." "That's gud." 4 *No sae gud eyther." "Hoos that; ' "1 marrt a bad wfe." "That's bad." "No sad bad eyther." "Hoo'sthatJ" ''She had a wheen o' sheep." "Nosaeb.d that. ' "Ay, but they had the rot." "That s bad." "No sae bad eyther." "Hoo a that*" "I Belt them and bought a hooso." "ThatsgMd." "No sae gud eyther." "Hoo'sthat!" "The boose was burnt." "That's bud." "No sae bad eyther"' "Hoo's that*" "She was n t." Harper's Magazne. Nagara Falls. In the summer of 18SS, Mr. Charles Graham of New York, one of the fnestafuarel- Hs'ts n the country, produced t water plor of Nagara Falls, remurkable n ts accuracy of drawng, n ts marvelous colorng,, lu ts masterly handlng of tonfes and effects, all of whch have been perfectly reproduc ed. As the pont of vew of ths cturo s near the Mchgan Central's staton at Falls Vew, and represents s ve.-tbuled lmted tran at that pont n the foreground, t obtaned possesson of tho water-color und the copes mude tberofrom. The latter are prnted n color, 15^22 nches, upon paper'j2'x2s nches n sze, and when traned cannot bo dstngushed roru a genune water color save by nn expert. They bear no advertsng sarewhats nvolved n the ttle. "Mchgan Central Tran Passng Nagara Falls." A lmted number o them wll be furnshed to the publc at ;'.o cents each, whch s very much beow ther commercal or ther artstc value. The.Owll be securely sent by mal upon a paste-board roll, wthout extra charge, but not more than two copes wll be sent,to any one address. Address, wth postal note or postal money order for the amount, O. W. Huggles. Ccu'l Pass, and Tcket Agent, Chlcugo, ll. ^ ^^ A Famly Tran East. Among the changes recently made by the Mchgan Central the most mportant s the new Specal New York Express, No. 20, whch leaves Chcago at 10:35 a. m., except Sunday. Detrot at 7:15 p. m Ths allects n connecton wth al Western, Northwestern aud Southwestern lnes enterng the cty, and enables passengers from Detrot or any of ts suburbs, to leave at a comfortable and convenent hour. For, ths reason, as well as ts admrable through' car servce to New York, t s especally adapted to the convenence of famles and uf lades and chldren. All New York State ponts are readed the next day, and the hour of arrval at the d'rnnd Central depot, New York, 4 30 p. n., enables the passengers to make ral or steamer connecton and reach all parts ot New York, Brooklyn and Jersey Cty and ther suburbs, before dark. The through car loavng Chcago, Saturday, goes/orward on No. (5 from Buffalo to New York on Sunday. Cty passenger and tcket offce, (K> Woodward Ave,, Northeast corner Jefferson Ave., Detrot. Kcllers's Luck. Lnmar (Mo.) Democrat, June 12: Havng been asked many tmes regard, ng my fortunate xjvcstmont n the Lousana State Lottery, I do not ob.ect to makng a statement concernng t, sad A. Keller, as our reporter asked for a statement. Some tjme snce I vvasa ffember of a club for one month and sent a couple of dollars teethe Lousana State Lottery, but wthout drawng any prze. Ths tme I sent one d. lar n my own name, and receved one-twenteth of tcket No. 31,2M u return. Ths tcket drew the thrd captal p zc of $50,000 I sent my tcket for collecton and wthn fve days I receved a draft on the Bank of Commerce at-st. Lous for *2,r,00. 1 have not used the m. ney yet. I am well pleased wth my nvestment of one dollar. Of course I was del : ghtod. I have determned to nvest the money n real estate, and hope to double t by another fortunate nvestment. The Lottery company certanly dealt farly wth me, and I shall patronze them agan. Rats' Tals. M. Bert sewed the tp of the tal nto to* back of n rat. After t had taken root h ts new poston, he cut t off close to t* orgnal pont ol nserton. Tho rat now wore a tol reversed n poston, the former tp beng the root. After some tme t was found that the new tal was senstve. Concluson,-the nerves of sensaton can carry mpulses each way. Dr. Koch has recently performed ths experment on forty ruts. In thrty cases the tals unted satsfactorly, but never, even eght months later, was any sensaton present n tho new appencugo.- Scentfc Amercan. HARVEST EXCURSIONS!»and Iron ML Route Hnlf Rates for the Round Trp To all ponts In Arkftnuas, Tout*. Kfrnnasanft Ne>r>4HkR, Ancrut Oth and *0th, September nthsnda4th. snd October 8th. Thrty d»y»' lmt, ample stop-over prvleges, cheap lands. Come csrfy for flr^t choce. Kor<Wcr1nt!vnsn<l amp:>let»free addromcompany'ajront- <>r M?:. 'lownsext, General Vhttoagar aud Tcket Agent, St. Lous, Mo..»,' ' * *-, } V,/1»t It.

3 wp?91p^p^^!.j^..jhu! l.^4u ^4.^ -^.-*.^»^/^Jv V Jll^ AK,! ^w#w- 4* MrJ-^WWflp ol.'. *. v.' 1 4 ',*. 1 y\ \ ' J pwuat Facto **4«Eootm to tn Smokng l'ablle. KUrvlw Wth Mr. Taavlll, mt B. *, Taaall 4c C* -H«Bxplan*»*» lt and DaTlopmeat of HI* Imap»M Bualaeaa-UalaUa tbe UaMS * J»fUU PUeuoneaal 8uce«*a. Denver (Colo.) Republcan. Jul/7. So many cause.* lave been assgned for the Baeess of tue celebrated "Tuu- ll'a Punch" cgar, that a Republcan reporter, lermnug of Mr. Tausll's sojourn at the Albany, called on hra to ascertan for the bonbttt of smokers a ue explanaton of these causes. Mr. Bll exprewsed a readness to couhktnumte on ths subject, and the reporter pled hs questons. "Have j'ot any objecton, Mr. Tansll, to gvng the readers of the Republcan an nsde vew of the success you have attaned n your busness?" "Well, no. I can't say that I have," was the reply. "Snce I have no pateut on my methods of coudnutu^ busness and no secrets to wthhold from the publc, I am perfectly wllng to gratfy you to the extent of my ablty. To commence wth: After the great Chcago fre of '71, I became convnced that there wan a large and ncreasng demand, a tdal wave, as t were, for a frst class fve cent cgar. How to produce such a cgar and to market t proftably was the problem to solve. forward and commenced ther work of "smellng out." Round and round tho groat crcle formed by the people "I was a young man at the tme and they ran, sometmes slowly, wth cunnng gravty, sometmes wth almost full of ambton. After carefully studyng the condton of the trade, I settled upon a plan to accomplsh my object. ncredble swftness, forever cryng But before I gve t to you, let me explan out one word, "Eswa," and all the peo the stuaton us t exsted at that ple repentng t after them, sometmes tme. The average retal dealer u loudly then t was dangerous-then those days never thought t possble to sella fve-cent c'zur at less than 10J whsperng t, cryng t over and over per cent proft, whle the average wholesale agan, runnng, dancng, yellng untl dealer or manufacturer made a the wtch-fnders, steamng wth per.proft varyng from $11) to $15 per 1,0!)) spraton, had lashed themselves nto on that class of goods. Such fve-cent cgars, of course, were made of very nferor a state of hystercal fury, shoutng domestc stock.' and shrekng wth the wldest contor "Now I conceved, the dea that by reducng both profts and slghtly ncreasng the prce, and at the same tme makng tons of face and lmb, lll.aftor one a crar that should contan the chocest Havana tl lor, and then planng t u the hands of oronot retal dealers all ovr the Unted States, wth an exclusve control or agency for the same for ther towns or neghborhoods, they, peated the fatal word In one last overwhelmng shout. through the superor qualty of the cgar, whch at oneo commanded a.largely neromrnd trade, could afford h> It was all over, tho tral was fnshed, the vctm was selected, and sell t at a reduced percentage of proft. Iu other words, I frst rased the prce of the goods to the retaler, and at the naught remaned but the pc.v.ty to bo same tme I reduced my own profts more than one-half. Ths dfference enabled me to furnsh an Havana flled cgar that could be retaled for fve cents. "Then T personally trawled over tho Unted States nnd establsh.<d 'my agences, relyng chefly on mal orders, thereby dspensng wth double "drummng" and the jobber's proft, thus effectng a grout savng. I charged nothng for my servces and sold my goods at less than one-half the proft, made by my compettors, n talcng ths step [ trusted solely to the ntellgence of the knowng tho hopelessness of t all, smoker and dealer for.my recompense. she fell agan at ther feet., Had I not done so the name of 'Tansll.Punch 1 hate that nght ono of our Ka'lr lads cgar, lke the names of my thousand mtators, would have been an Englsh-speakng msson-boy obsolete long ago." called Tom Onpe came n and told us "Has your fath n tho ntellgence of the woman had been taken to tho woods, the smoker and dealer been sustaned?" bound to a tree, her body smeared all "Yes, far beyond my most sangune expectatons. And us the busness has grown from year to yea\*l have approprated a percentage.of my profts for advertsng. I mght add n ths connecton that I have ju.-t placed con tracts for advertsng 'Tansrll's Punch' n nearly 7 V 00U daly and weekly newspapers, wth a combned annual crculaton of over 5()0,000,000 copes. From ths t can b>" «een that.my fath h tho merts of my goods and n my methods of sellng them s stronger than ever before." "Has your plan of dong busness met wth tho^upproval of the 1 merchant?" "My success t'lnphatcally answers your queston n the affrmatve. Could you but read our correspondence, you would then realze how our agency and goods are apprecated by both dealer and smoker. As to the value of our agency, I wll gve you an llustraton. Nne years ago W. M. Dale, a Chcago^ druggst, was.tryng to establsh a trade on a fve-cent cgar. To accomplsh ths he was payng &>3 per 1,000 for hs leadng lve-cent brand and retalng but 200 of them per week. I ' arve Mr. Dale the agency for 'TanslVs '.^Pllch' for hs neghborhood, and hs trade^ steadly ncreased from year t> ^fanr^untl t reached the enormous number of 27,000 'Tansll's Punch' per month, whle hs aggregate sales, all".»t retal, mnd you, of that sngle brand have largely'exceeded 2,000,000 Cgars. I could cte yon smlar llustratons n almost every part of tho Unted States." "Then I understand, Mr. Taunll, that your plan s to sell a frst-class cgar at a small proft and rely upon the largo volume of vonr trade for the results?" "That»'t,_ex.cMy." The only way to solvo the problem, 'Is Mftrrafwa Falure.''' s to try t. Jt remads us of the story onet the toadstool ' ad the mushroom. How can you "tell a ^ adstood from a mushroom! By eatng t. If t s a toadstool you de; f t s a mushroom you don't; Says an old woman n Barry's "When a man's sngle:" "I mnd when Jonme* (jawrle spered (cov.ra'd) me. 'Yo would rather hao Davt Curly, 1 ken,' ho says. I dnna dony't,' 1 says, for the thnn was well ken t, 'but ye 11 do vara well, Jennes/ says, and marry hm t ddv] J. S. Parker, Fredona, N. Y., sys: "Shall not call on you for the $100 reward, for I beleve Had s Catarrh Curo wll euro any case of caturrh. Was very bad." Wrlto hm for partculars. Sold by Druggftt*, 75o. BATEN TO DEATH BY ANTS Tha Horrble Fate Whch Came to a Poor Lttle Zulu Mad.»*Trav*la n Zululand:" The son of Fambel, a chef, had ded suddenly, and the dvners, or wtch doctors, were called upon to smell out the "abatak" who had caused the chefs death, Tho Zulus are completely under the power of the wtch doctors. They beleve thoroughly n bad men and women who go about at nght accompaned by ther famlars (wfl^eat and baboons) and lay poson n the path for people to step over, and on the thresholds, and n the felds to destroy crops -thns sckness and death are attrbuted to ther magc and malce. In the course of tho next day all the! people gathered n the square before PembelTs house a mass of slent, quakng men and women for none knew who tho dvners would convct^fambe^l hmself sat slent and sorrowstrcken n the doorway of hs hut, bofore hm tho wtch-fnders. There were three hdeous nnd revoltng men wearng varous charms upon ther flthy bodes, rows of gleamng teeth round ther necks, dred toads, wth the eyes of anmals and snakeskns ted to ther wasts, and a qu ratty of clankng metal bracelets on ankles and arms. After some prelmnary ncantatons those three men suddenly leap 3 tornado of fnal volence, they swooped wlh tho rapdty of eagles upon one startled grl, touched her wth a forked stck, and cred "Eswa," at th.dr lou L- est, whle tho eowerng crowd breathed freer the next moment, and thou re pronounced. At the supremo moment of selecton the people dropped away on ether t'.de, and the grl stood alone, the focus of all eyes. After one fearful glance all around, after one second of ten so rgdty, tho woman fell forward n a stupor of ptable terror, t was a sght no man could ever forget. When' those apponted by tho wtchdoctors touched hoc she rose shrekng and strugglng, but seeng- pobably over wth whte honey, a'small tran of t thckly lad near a whte ant's nest, nnd left. When the moon crept above the tops of tho trees Wood and I arose, buckled on our revolvers and cartrdge bolts, and sgnalled Onpo quetly. After gong about a mle tho boy crouched and ponted, and Wood and I went forward atone. There was a partal clearng n tho forest, and through the trees wo ooul.1 soo tho plan beyond, thou a passng clou drfted by and obscured tho lght. Wo two men stood close together and watted wth our revolvers u our hands. Nowhere docs the moon seem to shne wth such wonderful radance as n Afrca. When, tho lght showed agan we crept forward. All at once Cyrl gave an nartculate cry of horror and dsmay: ho was covered wth thousands of crawlng thngs, slmy mllons were creepng at our foot, and there before us n the whte spendor of tho moonlght was tho yo.nvg grl's body ted naked at tho foot o! a tree, to death bv ants. f- lav^rj n Florda. eaten An Indan n tho evorylndcs of Florda, t s sad, s stll.holdng n.sla\'c\y nojjroea that wero h;* when Ihe wa* broko out. The Name Saved Hm Propretor patont medcne (nn hosptal) My poor frend, 1 heat* you met wth : torrblo accdent on tho ralroad ne;r Smth's Crossng. Patent Yes; I was thrown ffty foot and gven up for dead. ' So I hoard; and when yon reganed conscousness you wero gazng on the bg rode wh ch contans an advertsemont of my stomach btters.*' "Yea, sr." "Well, you have be >n snatched frora the jnws of death, nnd I have callod for a testmonal." Now York Woo. 1 *!/. How She attracted Notce. Tbla lttle ncdent-t s a tree atory occurred a lew days ago n Phladelpha. Tre owner of a large retal store gave a to use uncertan means when sufferng from dseases of tbe lver, blood or lungs, such as blousness, or "lver complant,' skn dseases, scrofulous sores or swell holday to all of ha employee n the mddle ngs, or from lung scrofula (commouly of June. Caabera, foremen, a leamen < nd known as consumpton of the lungs; when women, cash boys and porters, all were Dr. Perce's Oolden Medcal Dscovery s nvted to spend tbe day on tbe grounds of guaranteed to cure all tbe-6 affectons, f the country seat owned by tbe employer. taken n tme, or money pad for t wll be Tents wore erected, a bountful dnner aud promptly refunded. supper were provded, a bond was statoned n tbe grove, and specal trans were chartered to uurry tbe guests to the country and Catarrh n the Head, by tbe propretors of tooo offered for an ncurable case of borne.'gan. Dr. ISage s Kernedy. JNothog else was talked of for weeks before the happy day. The saleswomen, The news comes from Tah' ttvt Mr. most of whom were young, unxously Doty, the Amercan consul there, has planned ther dresses and bought cheap led "the beautful Prucesa l-'eloua" to the uud pretty musns, whch they made up n ultar. tbe evenng, ttat they mght look fresh and gay. Kven tbe cash boys bought loo I.ad'et Wanted, new cravats and hats for the ureal occason. <. for a free tral package of Lme's Famly And 100 men to call daly on any druggst There was one grl, whom we shall call Medcne, the great r ot and herb remedy June, who could not ndulge herself n auy dfscovered by Jr. Slas Lane whle n the pretty bt of mery. bho was tbe ou:y Kcky Mountans. For dseases of tbe chld ol u wdowed mo'her who was paralysed. Jane wus quck aud ndustrous, but she hud heeu bu a lew mouths n tue store aud her wayes barely kept her uud her mother from want. "What shal.you we. r." sad the grl who stood next her ueuud the couuter. "1 bought such a lovely b.ue lawn." " have nothng but ths," sad Jane, glancng dowu at her rubty black nt!r- 1UO. ut, that s a wnter dress! You'll mell, ehd. Thee'll be dancng and boatng uud croquet. ^ uu myst have a summer gowu or else dun t go. ' Grls of 1) lke pretty gowns. Jane sad uothng tor a lew muutes. 4> shall wuar ths.' she sad frmly, "Aud I thn.; wll go. Mother wshes t. ' "But you can't dance or play croquet n that:" "Hs alw ys fun to see other people have fun," sad Jaue, bravely. The day came, brght and hot, and J.ne went n her heuv.v well d..rned dross. She gave up all dea of fun" 1ur herself and set to work to help the Others bud t. Ou the cars she bus ej herself n fndng seats lor the l.tde grls and.elpng the servants wth the baskets of provson*. On the grounds she st red games lor the ch'dren, ran to lay the table, brought water to the old lades, was ready to pn up torn gowus, 'or to applaud a "«ood bal:' she laughed and was happy and f'-euoly all te tme. {- he dd not dance nor play, but she w..s surrounded by a cheerlu, merry group wherever she went. On the the way home to town tbe employer, who vv;s a shrewd busness mau, beckoncd to hs superntendent. "There s one grj hero whose frendly, polte manner s very remarab'e. She wll be valuable to me as a saleswoman, tve her a good poston. That young woman n black,' aud he ponted her out. ' The next day Jane was promoted nto one of the most mportant departments smd s,nee that tme her success has been s ead.v 'J'he good nature and kndness of heart whch enaoled her to "ln. un n seeng others have fun," wore the best captal for her n her busness. She had the courage, loo, to dsregard poverty am to make tes best of lfe, a courage whch rarely tals to meet ts reward. All Electrc Clock. Two Akron, O., young men, one of whom s a thoroughly educa ed watchmaker, have completed an electrc C'OOK wnch promses to revolutonze the.c'ockmakmg ndustry n ths country. So far as can be Uevned ths clock s the most smply do "v^ed thng ever nvented and must not be confounded wth \he so-c ded electrc clol-ks now m,de, whch are only.selfwndng ugpt have a barrel and a mansprng. The Akron clo.k las nether, and n fact s so s mole that a htlo chld can see nto t. There are a few de a.is yet re qured, but n a short tme a complete and elaborate descrpton o u wll be made publc, What n the wcrld s tle use of sttng around wanng lw sotut'tlt^to tuu up. Vou m^ht just us wo.l st. djw n tte HK'ftdow and wa 4t»r-44u»-cjam-_Lo c'0c to be m.kcu. (.ot up ntul sluko yoursel am nuke up your utul to t n u > yonethnp. f.v«u luvc! nothfr dentu n \ou' mnd, tuu wrte to t.! '. Jolwson A: Co., Kfthod, V»., nnd they wll teil,\ou a thng or two thctf wll uxe you JULI > for joy. * B\r the summer are new sem d >phunsk aut wool abres for moun^r. mut ng-chnese cnpos; also a very handsome <u#yah called "sual Antonette," wth lne UuK^Ual'Inos, wteh s des,k"ed lor lght mournng. A pocvet nrrur 1 r'c tn smokers uf "Tunsl's I > utn-l" ;,&. t:w:ar, Next n favor to the foundaton slps n black satn or more, n the nev black 1 ce tolets, are those.of shot slk. whch are consdered f^ move effectve than those of oue brght color. When Baby was sck, we pave her Castorla, When she was a Chld*, she cred forcastor:, r When she became Muss, she clung to Castor a. Whoa sha had Chldren, she jjavo them Casttxta, some use * ^ It Bsa't T*y blc d, lver nnd kdneys t s a post e cure. For constpaton ; nd clearng up the complexon t does wonders. Lhldeu lke t. Everybody prases t. Large ske package, 00 cents..at all druggsts. The frst lcense for the marrage of a whte man to a colored woman n Ptts burg was ssued recently, though not a few lcenses for the nmrr age of whte womeu to colored men have been ssued. Fve cents saved on soap: lve dollars Jost on rotted clothes. Is th-'t economy; There s not fve cents dfference between the cost of a bar of the poorest *oup made and the best, whch s, as all know, Dobbns' Electrc. Cool, transparent, whte woolens are used by Parsan dressmakers n combnaton wth soft slks that are cther fgured wth delcate buds ; nd sprays of flowers, or else strped or brred Wth quaur, old-fashoued colors n bua, rose-pnk, llac, etc. FOR ^y USE X_>^j[^o E 3 AJC_N - AT Dr-Vfcr^TS CM) PF.M.rns. THE CHARLES A. VOGcLER CO., Dattlmore.Ul SICKH ADAG9IEI t'omulvt'lyem-ed byj tl'sfltlle PUt*. Thpy ab«o rcllave Ds«tre?sfr>Dy!-p p»fa,i ft gealon and T>oHesrtyj Eatuy. A jwrfnet rorucy for D;«ueFn,Nan»e; Drowsness, }lml Tata n the Month, Coat*d TE ue,?an n the Sde/ TtHtPID LIVEK. They) t-f-ulate the BoTTelen r:"*lv Vegetable. Prce 25 tents. CASTER Msrcnr oo., mrr YO^K. Small Pll. Small Dos*. Small Prce,! tn CHILD/' fy BK& LESSENS PAJNT BT0U FEnK SOQK TO MAI L BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTAM suls BY ML DRuasjsrs. **" PEN! Wl-te.1 1. ST.\«kWK.Mll T Tt, 1'u.- >, '*-h.. f,".[re-l l.l.-u'',-. \ < : «l ;j;.«,.fj,.-cjtu l. lan.s n Specl.C.tv..!/< no. )j 1,,1-. t jlty. In thn lne ofcnodl PKKMIIT MTB. Infnnnaftfcm fmm. TUB MeprlLF.:* WOVE* WIBKjrRXCKjpO.. SPKCIAL TO MKHIBAX yabmeii The K. K. Conralftnlt.ner of ttchlvaq IUM approved' of our rentng- for r ghx, of way fencng. If any R. K. ITO»M» j on Hand,,cd»t a»k tb«m to fence your Tght of way wlh 'lbe le Mullen Woven Wlr«>eu-n^ Velocpedes, Bcycles, Trcycles CHILDREN'S CARRIAGES, Lades' and 6ents' Rattan Chars and Rockers At Factory Prl<-ea. Goods dehr. ercd to all ponts *lthln 700 ml** of ChcaRO. Send for Catalogue. CHAS. RAISER, 62 and 64 Clybourn Avenue, CHICAGO, ILL. NORTHERN PACIFIC, ILOWPJUCE RAILROAD LANDS ^ FKKIl (ovrrnmtnt I,4XI»S. r«rnu.!oxs of ACKfcS ot ««-h n Mfnrwa»U, Jforta Ltkota, Moulana. Idaho. Washngton am Orefroa. CCUfl Fflft fu'"heatlor. w>«h JUp» de-'nblng TH» «S»lU ruii BMT Aarrltt Mrat. Urastar and Tmber Lama now open to Sottl«r 9. HEA'T FKJE AdlrMa CHAS B.LAMBflR», L 5tft I A?; 5a, r» UrXtJt* TUA Farn aver/ traa you wnu. Burlngton :, Route I or THK HALF RATES -TO THE- FARMING REGIONS WEST, SOUTHWEST, NORTHWEST. For jartrulara call on yourtrket Agent or a<dresa 1*. S. ITCST.S.Ucn'll'as. Ast., C. U. & y ,Chcago. ~' DUTCHER'S FLY KILLER Mkea n c\ an sweep. Ever"" slce: wll kll a quart of fl:es.." to;js buzzng r»u nl tars, dvng at eyes, tlcklnsr yuur none, sk;>s nurd words and set'lrk^ KVLfpnttrtlnsjexp's}. S(.'?d*J.'f*tsf'r5 sheetstu \ D U TC It ca,tt.albuut, V '- 1 pre-r.'.jc and fully enrlo-mh Hfc- l as the only* I>fr)f<' lortcbctrt^luc'js f>f h\h ds^-jtae. U. l. IN'JKA IIAM.M. U., Amsterdam. N. Y. Wo hsve sold Blj* G for many years, and t haa g?en the best of satsfacton. I>. It. DYCTTEJtCO.. Chcago, Bold by Druggsts. wv>mmm RH Sold bv dnwlsts or sent by mall,.s0c. E. T. Ha-eJtne, Warren. Pa. IRRIGATED LANDSSS& T Pecos Valley. jtheastern New Choce lraelm. ^ - HJ JIM ~.' pure Mexco. watery a dvlebtfnl " stona cllnntc en!; aburrance all the year; of pure almost watc contnuous»unrhne; alttude ;>.J00fect; bealtblrat lootllty m t'10 L'. 8.. no cnsuu^to, no malara SO nerea wll yeld a competency. Wrte for partculars, Tvmt'u ths naer. tn Pecoa l<tl^ntl«n A, In- T'tmvut Co., H, IU. on roc H., Chcago, 111. W Jk MTBTrt -^ 1 '" to ' lkt ' '>nr«e of rnmtrr r*l» I b U ntflv u- salesmen lor tns I k-htr^ S'.lr, l, ) -1-. Sul.vv «) t. sv am ex- ) em «>n 11 :,'.- r_'. Adrlr.'xs wth ot.tno, Krpw.l u nn r A l'..fl l'. W,>w'th-\vu, he-.g>, ; l. BBmHDBOOIHB A ^1^ KTUU k#«««*<jr7m>r^k>>» M relef 1..r *OI»«* KIDDER'S PASTILLES. ^,?^ l>z vtv. 1 * ( l IL'KIUSWI, MttsS. $5 H to 19 n J:y, Snmplrs worth St. IS Ft Eft. t.nea nut.llt ll.^'.s' leel. Wrte Br\^» sters.tfetvr-jn. H oler Co..Hll v. a.ca. a^ra!c STUDY. Hnok-neepnc, fenmnnkhp, V 1V1 VM Arthmetc, Shorrband, etc.. thor. onuhly tuult by nl. 1,ow rules. Crculars free. UIV ANT'd COLLtlU K. Jkl Mam St., buffalo. N. V. W. N. l\, I). VII M. When wrltlnp to Advcrtlsera please say»ou saw the advertsement n thu Paper. Hot Weather s the very best trme totrypyle'spearlne. Then the wash s largest, and a savng of tme and tol s best apprecated. Thnk olnrr a laree wash wth lttle or no rubbng. Consder much longer your delcate summer elothntj wll last f rubbed to peces on a washboard. A savng s a gan, u'll be surprsed and pleased wth the cleanlness, satson and comfort whch comes of the use of PEAR LINE. pe any servant can ure t. Perfectly harmless you can soak your fnest lnen and laces n Pearlne and waterfor a month, wth safety. Delghtful n the bath makes the water soft. Perhaps )'ou have been usng of the mtatons and have sore hands and fnd your clothng gong to peces. Moral the Orgnal and best. 9» I>arltnc u manufactured only by JAMKS PVI.E. N'cw/ork. tf.» -v*aym$.jtfjsnasc vm^r^i

4 Fnckney Dspatch. AJ). BENNETT. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR PncHney, Mchgan. Tjurtsuy,.hly^'tl, l^u YTashujrtou Letter. UeargOU!\;0! ' I. ' * s H '"td ed. 0!r never dcomel. tle 'Trushng up," ben^j ntended for temporary use s only of temporary value and even then cannot be thoro.gt. The canddale fnds out the general t-tmor of the questons asked and prepares hmself accordngly. tl)u day u'ter the ex uunaou o las I.'lluW- WASHINGTON JULY 23, 18S9. If t has done nothng else, -the cvl servce law has put a ]>.-»rttal stop to nepotsm n the (ovornment oler Ten years aro a man and wfe CMUM work at ad jon n;,' deds and ther chll could prow up and be traned for a smlar porton. In those days even the polceman rased hs hoy to he hearty and I Washngton * ovar enemy to strong, had hm enlst n the army at! (0 (, sy>tem prgs. culunus on tho eghteen and serve fve years and come su(j,-> c t every v. e.; and equally zealback and be a polceman, under the' ou, comumets who adhere to the fosslzed law provdng that polce; {\ lt(, ru>.; 1 U.T.-'.!r to tle rescue rnust be honoraby dscharged solders (, U), Sje as ' a cr-oud n nk. as f and salors. Ths law was excellent {.;.,.; ;. (,0^.:,0,.. ; ;,,,. at the close of the war and'vras ntend- : tonvncmg t 'o ed to favor the volunteer solder s a ; ^-, t I'M I o' tae ho 1 1. ta mddle aged or old man. Congress re-!:l\( :, v t< 1(J p, VS of,-.\, fuses to repeal the law. a nhdv utere- n Three recent appontments have. ^,oo-rc tm-e are e caused great comment as nstances of. I' j,;ll,;1 --- u>>u M" nepotsm. One of these appontment: ;\m:.-. bv Thomas J. Morgan, Commssons ; ~'~ r " -----^-^------^----- " 1 of Indan Affars, of hs wfe as h- prvate Secretary at a Government,! '. M. h V - e salarv of one thousand dollars. TI: - """ ' ; ' v ' ' secotfd s that of the wfe of Mr. Dorchester superntendent of Indan schools as an nspector of Indan schools ' t'n at sx dollars per day and expenses. The thrd s that of the daughter of Commssoner Tanner,nd hs prvate secretary at $l.vsoo per annum. Ths last, the appontment of a school grl to a poston that many experenced exsolders have faled to fll satsfactorly has the addtonal object of be-g n bad judgement. The arguments aganst the appontments of relatves to offce are as old a> the Government. 1 "Washngton, Hamlton. Frankln all r ' d -ponded upon \'! - error, ><v- A!ltl> and um'.-h more says the Oho 111,111. T.rus )V' -.ontuvrrsy bou- cvl.-<. rvee m-ver des, and n f'd- >': m wl stll r. w 11 \,. r -.rro,.-. n the ;.'; -vr\,-mvs t. f: h e I\;;ure;;nd wrestle wth the Mljert to a tnsh. *J'l>e l'o-t cannot " all ths- has \\ eddmrto!;..u.-.md de- > v * - ; :.: nl for a Fear';:! sel Wnn U ral. The I:.! >a;.s, ' men s 'earfullv a' 1 1 wuvoh rulv o, \,\." lu (). *,.o -eu, 1 :\;r:>.-l loul t. 'Vor u\r j.'-rtc t so e.-s t let ta!ce geat vh'-t.-ure n ro-o.nmendng ts us.* to c.e.v r'l'.hcted wth ^^-0^111 1^ or al'e-nc!. ' >>][< \ a j; : (f't'n' mv own pcrence) to be a no:-.t e rhcr, d..!, V^WPVTtrTt-T -4.'.^»-f Jt f^ca^-.'jfl celt 1)1000 s on. I!a 1!! \ S 1 M J - 'o r>, tt.: ol hv.o: ' he n TV."!'-. svto a. a t a e! ' ;,! t'" s...,t> o[ 'jfr an ned. r.n-1 t; uf.d <,:' all \m bo 1 hy org.:ls; W,- o t'. ' ;o-rvcs mv d- 1 t'e\'e-h the })or! ; p:u" ly/.'.'d. The, lh. ' and hones ;Lre as nohmg t. IJ ra eg"m''ts of tlm fran or felt strong]v on the subject regardng ' n *}!! rves V >s ' art- ll1 ','' 'le- causes of headace 1. tts'., ',,' T ;d/./. ne>s. h I f e n.'. *.f t;:.' o: l t. stwaal t as a dangerous movement tendng v.-eak.-s. r ceph'-o'tv-.s, rcuraho^, >-r,\t\ hansand o-m. ' A free tral bo'te of to create an arstocracy of offce holders. That such was not the result Jong ago s a mystery, though such appontments as th se three show a reassurng desre to grab even thng n sght. Dr. Mle : h-st. sl.c. CM-0--. m, 1 dne; stor Alludng to the cvl servce law Honorable J. D. Taylor, of Oho, states that he quts agrees wth the Comms-! A - s^l ' l '' s -' X-r\ ne te late>t ynd >!u are '.r all 1 hose ds- ' e had at F. A. tgler's Ther 'tsacss.oomng. 1'roh bly no (>te thne/ h s caused h a -j'-'truml )'ecv;; el' trade at F. as ther gvng ^u,- st '.r, away to ll;."r enstom-u's of so many snners n ther statement that com 'ree tral b-t'cs ut' Dr. Kng's Now puratvely few college bred men obtan l>scovon-, r C-stnnnon.' Ther postons through the examnatons. [ 1 rade -' smply cu'canons n ths ve-y He thnks that they are evdentlv cor- \ valuable ;,r.*-l.; feaa the fa-'t latt.alv/avs euros ;md lo-ver t;s-pp.hns. j <'-euys, colds, as'hr.a. br--rht s, I - onp, am.'llth'o-'! n- lung dseases rect n statng that the large.majorty have receved only common school educatons. The logc s easy. A co lege bred man, as Fob Ingersoll -;\ycannot read wt ee.se ten years a He-, graduaton the dploma he-worn ;!:. memory of earler studes s dmmor.j The exact lor.gtude and lattude of some unmportant. Afrcan cape s forpotton; the dat^ of the battle of done'.-; Cross Koad s gone accoototned bv the rules tor solvng many probhon-. n arthn(;tc. I'm - haps, he coo.d >,,vo the problems hy Algebra, but the c servce authortes do not allow that. Ths college bred man may he a brght man, quck to learn, rapd n executon anl have a, ready command of lucd Englsh, but because he doe- ma. understand mpractblc questons n mathematcs, he s barred by the ey servce rules and yet only one government clerk n ten has to do wth fgures at all. The successful are of the country school teacher class, a slow, ploddng dense race whose lttle knowledge s always at fnger ends the fewer vegetables the grocer has the less trouble he fnds n dsplayng them on the sde walk n the mornng. "Beware of the man of one book" s always frequent o. e-1 t he;ore 1-::-1 hnt*!.< tree, b ': lo warranted. "CARBURET OF IRON." wm 13 THE BEST. k?^us1 ff RtVLra p^«f{ft wth truth. The man wth the com-' fefgs^n M $Xa~.*» ' -»» mon school ducat on the term beng 1 j^wm^-o-.-r-j ;r>~> a r\?.rt, ^EG«Ba f% mtkln A.3STI3 FIXTURES! durng the month of AUGUST -k vn T h7 7r;n' :ujl jlpll, Please call and examne goods and get prces. USE NO WIND IN SELLING GOODS, but make the PRICES ANO GOODS do the talkng Everythng n mv lne as low as can be sold'aml lve. Nev/ goods arrvng every dny. All knds of reparng done. Watch reparng a specalty. Your.- Respectfully. Fne Eugene Campbell. used n ts wor^c sense, 0f t.cn succeeds j h S S? $ % B> g I E S where a better man fals. As corres IT. V;».:n3I.El!y' _ E h P ^ AV3 KIDNEY DISEASES. pondent a large majorty of the-e lhr9.l;.'..ttc5 g"oto* IVV'T A - - MVL.0 FREE H J r-m U «'? n r n W ' U ln,j ' 0!,(> Purchasng el-ewhere. We a -t people make gnomnous falnre.s and Sl) -aa-n-aa a uost. t chcb*o!nl * W V m slock Jl J' 1 ' 1 JlI1< (, ' all are,transferred to postons where the 8T. tons,mo., Any, 1,'S8. nuottttxkcnredmo knds of good needed n a frst-class of Uabctcp, md tu-day am heartr and well. work s only that of a copyst. Not Mug.A.A.CLLAJr/rre.H. Woau'a Exchange. harness shop. We are also prepared CntOAGo.DncJ. 'bltuy Kdneys troubled ma one n fve has any dea of punctuaton, qualfcatons beng lmted to to do all knds of Reparng Nealy and Promptly. the commonest branches. Another class of eumvsfnl applcants for government postons conssts of people who take three to sx months coachng for examnaton. When done several yc>r«, BnnHTVF. entrely curt-dzue. A. C SMITH, Western Sr.v;* Co. Jos.M.Norrs, A^-r. :., t. I. & p. n, R. BHFFAT.O.K. Y.,M^v j 1, ';-.-;."-snf>rrd fromt.nral)::;o Hovcruly^ars. jl',ntcam:>o. cured mo. s;hanl!:u,ca»t. U;an.r-r(!-., nunc, Tt.. St'boat (Jo.? ". r-cfla, AllTl ',.),'; S. ;{ l<;i"lt[yf,pr?vr3pftt..--jacuou. f.v.n)':) JU:o ( ; (,. I'llH-'nklaAv. f-r. Louts, Dec. l.»,-'t«. ;uun*;'ineha8allth«mrucackat.t.iu;-tfc:,'-:rv, b' M -.s JO'Jt.lJ'way. R<^kvtnr-,T.,\nv,,-.,''.-;;. C-mrecnmmnuJ under a teacher the examnaton - luulltin; LU'-h(y._ 'rv. JOHN ILVWALS. nerely a test of the" ad lly? <'!):'o^r) Tnf:s,I;l,t-cIc.'S, 'cs/.ioto, Nov. 17, W! e III e 5?!!-^ff.,f-d ( v -; ''.o-y, Jj.t. -.'.s, '-;s,.-<:h' r :n^rrl!l coacher nstead of tha, of Ju.lYl.c.'-,.:!-. K ' S, - ; L ; W ) 1 T J : I ; E < r; P U j I. Iho knowledge ganed by >.uch a J..saL'pan],S;j,t.U.S.;:. t;.-\vu]b!]lglj:-)bl:np." P,* g^ew Harness Shop! I wsh Lo nform te- pt-opb' nf I'n'k- ley and shrroundng country that I have just opened a new HARNESS ghqpj n my buldng, 2d door south of the Montor IIo*e, and would say that I am prepared to sell all knds HARNESS GOODS! CHEAPER than you can purchase them n any other place n Lvngston county. Those desrng to buy harnesses wll fnd t to ther nterest to call and examne mv stock and get prces on SINGLE AND DOUBLE LIGHT AND HEAVY HARNESS We nvte all to call and we wll be pleased to show goods We wll contnue our -hoe shop n connecton wth the harness shop and wll do all knds of reparng neat and cheap. (Jve me a call. Thos. Clnton. ^Bfe U HI P?)"T«IITE8TED--, TfpMI_ G O ] / Ther Tonc, Alteratve «* ^^ ^ ^SWjSLfc / been "tme tested." ^ **»«thoum»d«of t«u»w«wftuh «e I If you real SWYOIB or USSTBDSfl, the MVKJ oo doob* la»0 Nut, tale o«e dm«of BZLZ BEAMS < oa «**<"«) *" LINE YOU UP. C»U on sout Druggl.t fvr (IMUB. Sold «r«rywh«r«, gbc rttmt" - tmt by null, poetped, on recept etfrlm. «1.P.SMITH A CO., Sole Propfetora,»T. LOUIS* I BlnwrH.- "IwUhto»ddMyt«;»»aopyto theffleteteyo/mel _ fotulblllouttad KervouTrouble*. Mynotf and wl»«ut»umly rlt«bihab} atral.wthmo.t*»u*f»etoryrmulu. W(haaway.keeplhajolatatlUM.** r JTO T H E WEST END HARNESS SHOP! Where you cau buy a Sngle or Double Harness as cheap as you can fnd them anywhere. Beng compelled to have some money, I wll sell at the followng prces: For Nckel Plate, Double Strap Sngle Harness, $11.00; Sntjb Strap U hu'h trace, wde Breast Collar, nckel wnker braces, Jly terrt, 7-8 nch sde straps, Sl;>.00 to Double Harness, see plate, wthout collars, $20.00 to :>o.00; also sweat pads, canva.s collars, whps, etc, I wll^sell anythng" n the harness lne as cheap as can be afforded. own make. B? u,keparng a specalty, ed to call am settle. All Knd: Of Job Work Done at the Dspatch Offce. The harness are all of my Those ndebted to me are reauest- J O S. S Y K E S. Pnckney Dspatch One Dollar Per Year The In Advance. GOING OUT OE BUSINESS! Our entre stock of FURNITURE, BEDS & BEDDING. to ho s dd regardless of cost. NOW IS.THE OPPORTUNITY OF A I.IFF. TIME TO SECURE IM- MKNSI:: BARGAINS IN ALL GRADES Oh FURNITURE. $100,000 WORTH OF FURNITURE TO BE SACRIFICED! Parlor, Bedroom, Dnng, Lbrary and Offce Suts. Tables, chars, bookcases, sdeboards, hatraeks, desks, lookng glasses by the hundreds. The largest stock of Uurnturo, Beds and Beddng n the State to select from. Don't fal to call at once and secure bargans. You wll never have another opportunty lke ths. DUDLEY & FOWLE, > «w-» MAMMOUTH 1-URMTURE WAIt F.H00HS, 125 A* Jefferson Ave., - Detrot, Mch. HER^WE ARE! Havng secumhhe buldng owned by L. II, Boe.be on North Man-st., we wll keep a very Complete stock of Canned Goods, Smoked and Dred Meats, Candes, Peanuts, Cgars, Tobaccos, Soft drnks, a varety of Pckles, Jackson Crackers, Fruts of all knds. CALL AND GET A MILK SHAKE, We wll sell ce cream by the dsh or quart. We have all knds of fresh Bakery Goods. KWWarm Meals wll be served a all tmes. share of your patronage, we reman Jours Truly, Hopng to receve a LARUE & DAVIS. 3. :.- - w "m "sr tv, ff

5 Pk A. 'J^V f- '&'> 'W"\ a" -d" O \ -O I. 0. BEMETT, EDITOR & PUBLISHER. PU8U8MED EVERY THURSDAY AT ney, - Mchgan. 0 Subscrpton Prce Strctfy n Advance: ONE YEAR SIX MONTHS THREE MONTHS-...$1. Entered at the Poetottctt at Fnckney, Mchgan, at! «econd-claas matter. m ^Vllage Drectory.K caecttxacs^bs. MJBTHODIST EPISCOPAL CHUKCH. Rev. W. J. Clack, pastor. Servces every Bund ay mornnj,' at U):3u, and alternate Sunday evenngs at 7:30 o'clock. Prayer muetuu Thursday evenngs. Sunday school at close of mornlor servce. J. K For les, Suonrutendont. TONUREGATIONAL 01IUUCH. \j Rev. O, B. Thurston, pastor; servce every Sunday mornng at 10::'>n, HIH! alternate, Sunday evenngs at 7:30 o'clock. Prayer meetng Thursday evenngs. Sundav school at close of uoruln servce.' Geo. VV. Sykea. Superntendent. ST. MK Y"8 CATHOLIC! (MIUKCn. Rev. Wn. P. Consdlne, Pastor. Servces every thrd Sunday. Low mass at K o'clock, hgh mass wth sermon at 10::1(. a. m Catechsm at 8:00 p. n., vespers ana benedcton at 7 :3u p. n. The A, O, H. Socety of ths place, meet mery thrd Surlnay n the'kr. Mathew Hall. The C. T. A. and B. So; fttv of ths place, meet every thrd Saturday evenng n the FT. Mathevv Hall. Rev. W. P. Oonsedne, J-resdent. SOCIETIES. YOUNG PEOPLES SOCIETY OP CHRIS TIAN ESHEAVOU, meets every Monday evenng at the Oongl church. All nterested n Chrstan work aro cordally nvted to jon. MrB. A, J. Uhappoll, Presdent. KNIOHTS OF MACCABEES. Meet every Frdav evenng on or before f tll of the moon at old Masonc Hall. Votn' ' broth ere cordlallv nvted. L.D. Brokaw, Sr Knnht Commander, EVSI1TEGS G^ZZZO ISAAC TELLEP, I'ountv Surveyor. Poetottce address, Eaat Cohoctah. Mch. H F. RHTLEU,. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Offce next to rerddmce, on Man ptreet. Pnckney, Mchgan. Calls promptly attended today or nght. ~\ W. HA/,K, A. r. \j, Attends promptly all professonal calls. Offce a' resdence on I'nudlla St, thrd door west of Connret'toal church. PINCKNEY, - MICHIGAN. W r. VA.N WINKLE,, Attorney and Counselor at Law. and SOLICITOU IN CHANCE UV. Offce n Hubbell Block (rooms furmrelv occuped hv S. L. lljh.-ll,) HOWELL, MUl. W A 'AN'l'KU vv Vhsat, Beans, Barley, Clover!-'ee,l, Des-- ed Uo^s, etc. r"~'ht' a^;vr mark'' : 1 ce c, ll»e pad Tllus, Uc.-.O, I'lurkr.. Mca. tf rand Trunk Ralway Tme Table. MICHIGAN' AIR UKB DIVISION. GOING EAST. STATION8. UOINU WJCttT, *.*.] A.M.I V. H. 1 r. H A. a.:' 4:*0 8:11)1 LENOX s> b» ->l 4:10 7:551 Armada :; ' U 501 2:60' 7:lsJl Hunfu \ :'.JU 1015! 1:0ft! 7:10( Rochester 7:0¾ lu:00 - :»b\ 1 A.M j 6:«55! ll;«4 10:40 w.-aa 8:10 H:ft) 7:40 7:()0 I H:ao' b:wn 5.o! J\^^\.\v^\ 6:081 Wxom j «. : o : <M (<*- ; «;«o J S. Lyon-J \!»:;u 1»./«* fd.l! b:cm Tamburj '.):M1 &: «'! PINCKNEY 'lo.-s!.'>:.'0 Ure^ory,10::11) 5:17 8toekbr(U,'tt 1(.:4¾. 4:r>8 Henretta U;lW 4 ;;tt) JACKSON,11::«) I :.'MC 1-4:,-,1 1 '!:r>h. 4:17 1 A: Ml ' 5:-'.")!.0::.5 : 0 j All trans run oy "central stanuard"'tme. All trans run daly,sundays excepted. W.J. SPIEK, JOSEPH HK'KSON, Superntendent, (jenural Manager. Toledo, Anu Arbor & Northern Mch gttu Rulroad Tme Table. The short Lne latween Toledo and East Sagnaw, and the favorte route btst\vu<;u Toledo and Grand Kapds. Trans run on Central Standard Tme, For all ponts n Northern mchgan take tle Toledo, Ann Arbor k Northern mchgan Ralroad. Trans for the north leave (Federman) or monroe Juncton at 0:10 a. m., 4 :00 p. m. and 8.00 p. n. 8011th bound trans leave nonroe Junctou at 12:2- a. m. 10:20 p. m. and 4:0b* p. n. Connectons made wth I mchgan Central at Ann Arbor,! (rraud Trunk at Hamburg:, Detrot, Lansng & Northern at Howell, Chcago <fc Grand Trunk at Ouraud, Detrot, Grand Haven k mlwaukee and mchyan Central at (hvosso.uncton. Flnt & Pere marquette at. nt. Pleasant, Clare and Farwell. and Grand Rapds ^ Indana at Cadllac, at Toledo wth ralroads dvergng. H. W. ASHLEY, a. J. PAISLEY. Gen 1 Manager. Gen. Pa?n. Aaent AGENTS For Te WANTED! PICT ORAL HISTORY««'""BIBLE. An ncomparable, work. Ileada lke a ronwnc Xlehlgan Crop Report, Julj 1, For ths report returns hav» been receved from &53 correspondents, representno; G(H townshp.*. Fve hundred and sxtv-ek'ht of these reports are from 4401 townshps n the southern four ters of countes, and 141 reports are from 12(J townshps n the central countes. In addton to the foregong the "farm statstcs," collected and forwardj? :.r? j eel by supervsors, have been receved :'uj from 04 per cent of the townshps n the {"state. The footngs of these are not yet, complete, but have progressed far enough to furnsh approxmate statements respectng the wheat acreage of the present year, and the acres and yeld n The number of acres of wheat n the State n May of ths year, as shown by returns compled, was 1,455,556. Multplyng the acres n each 2ounty by the average yeld as estmated by crop correspondents, and footng the products, gves 22,000,952 busnels as the probable total yeld n the State Ths s an average per acre of 15 and 8- hundredths bushels n the southern countes, 15 and 68-hundredths In the central countes, and 15 and 52-hundredths n the northern countes. The number of acres of wheat harvested n '1888 was approxmately 1,506/)37: yeld, 23,472,177 bushels, an average of 15 and 38-hundredths bushels per acre. The area harvested n the southern countes, as tabulated for ths report, was acres less than reported on the ground n May, In the central and northern countes the ar.a harvested was greater than reported n wheat one year npo. The ncrease s doubtless sprng wheat sowed after the as.ses-nent was taken. Nearly one-tenth of the wheat acreacre of ths y^ar s reported "wnter- and captvates old and VOIUIL;. I'nparallelt.'d.-^.11 1 cess attaned ev-rywu'ere. a _'< character,! klled, runed bv nsects, or otherwse numerous ndorsements, and low- prces, attvru ", au'ent* the most permanent money ma'.a.'j: b --, destroyed.. 1 llis Jlclud«3 damage t ness otn'ted, C\er IIMI pr-j-es and C>' beant'ul I,..-.., el't'vn^s.»\'!'n- lnj. lustacd de-ct-ptnn and hghest terms, a.idaess: "M:nd J. PALLES & CO. P'JBS. CINCINNATI, OHIO. AGENTS' WANTEO.! «\mmmt*m\ l'.\ere w"le <*r: 1 for,- J 1 the wo rd are nterested n that wonderful coutry-~ah:-ka. Tle IAMESMAIIKE1, J NOTARY PUBLIC, ATTORNEY works of Mr, Bancroft haw met wth renarka' e And Insurance Arent. Le;.:»l papers made out success, hacnv; acqured a :.:reat reputaton n onahort notce and reasonald' 1 terms. Also a/ent Amerca and l',uro»" Anv _<_ od, earnest, and for ALLAS LINE of Ocean st-anots. Olbr,- on actve worker ( an mala- f Nortn sde Man St. I'nck.-ev,, Mch, C^f^j OP-. STOCKBRDGE, 1:1 $5,00 TO $10.03 a DAY lect. I etwee pa\ n:el)! I 0 1, pronerlv pres ut"d '. "THEHISTQHY Z':,, Wth. '11. ; 'd f T: huok s - r>.0: an c'ra.v.'-t-!?' ST f"l!aa.' ths mor-t c'l; e s ;dn rtr vol;).>. Apply anuecalely ton sed:--\e a rto;-' -. or ths rae opporl unty wll rl > 1 a-.d he focever (e^r Nel e. m mey,or >e I I [ 1..'l' r^ I'oj (lrell to mhark n ths eujerp - 1,.'s the pull.-hers.ll low t mrlv da\ s' tme f,> 1 r,,. > a' lo de! \\ er and c )!- JB-A.VX,,e;'o- d'.avla't E;S. P VCTLJIINARY SURGCON. OLI: TO POL (Irad.ale of I he Toronto Veter OR, TOURS ROUND THaWGPvLD. nery ( olh L'e Teutmet of all domestc anmals n a protes.-onal An mtens' -f< ''_' Look. Thvlln manner,.vle,lls prompt ly at (ended to dv 01 nuht. homea n all an ot e I'M. Woudel-nfl' sc acs eaa eloe: > 1..:I..J and - 1 '"1 n''.' ph< j t rop s l!e lar'-alde e.. ".'".-, l!"ovv ' 1 0 MICHIGAN. I p eva?:ons :l,,d v.oa-. I he he s(,, v\.. e ; farhe d;! ;- aje'-. on th.. I vellll' mollev r.!l!ll mark 1. Over e-ht m Ire I pa.e-. and I h v TAMES T. KAMAN wll \tre u-uvanc. on your lfe n the old lelahle.manhattan Lft Company, of New \ork. Ordnary Lfe Term Payment or Endowment) n I, [ W T \ Polces (n the new Smv vor.-hp Dvdend nlan ) rl U. IS * O Ths company's lecod for M vears pa*t stows ) crcular- and e\tr the lowest penamta^e taker, from polcy-holdera and the h^nevt per entn.re -etnrm'd t«* lueu of any conjmv donl.' Vusue>s n tle I nted fetates. It Iso shows t!e lar.'-t pcrcen 1 are of ttssntta for the d,- na u'e ot -< deltednes:-. Address postal card to.las, T. Kaaau, Solctor Ano Arbor, Mch. (-lno ) hundred sup-ad eaa'a\ n ^ e\ er,\ where, ml I ED I or' Cnl. S.'ds on ^ _-, 1 Th LYCEUM PUBLISHING CQ. Cl.CXATI. CHID. was reasonably supposed the gran aphs would do, whch, however, cannot be safely estmated, at least before the gran s threshed. On the 25h of J cne ths department maled crop corrospondents a crcular relatng to the gran aphs, and requested a general and thorough mveslgat'ou for the purpose of determnng the extent rf the rad and the proport cn of wheat plant* attacked. On dune 30 a summary prepared from v.ore than 000 reples was furnshed the press. In all more than 700 reples have non l.er-n receved. The louse was oum n mmense numbers n +5^ A NOTICE! Durng the next 30 days we shall need every dollar that s due us and request every one that owes us, ether on note or account THAT IS PAST DUE, to call and settle. TEEPLE '& CADWELL* June 4th, SPRING BEDS! We are showng nne dfferent styles; also Mattresses of all the leadng varetes. And yet, whle t s a lttle out of season for AVe are not out of all the latest styles of Dnng chars. Tables, Center Tables, large easy Rockers, Lades' Rockers" n Reed, Walnut'Ant; Oak, Plush, etc. Don't forret that vou-ean always fnd our stock of Cur* tan Poles, Drapery Pns, Drapery Chans, n fact Cabnet hardware of any descrpton complete. We make a specalty of CABINET WORK! Of any descrpton to order. Old Furnture repared and made to look lke new. Prces reasonable. Take a look at those RUBBER TIPS FOR ROCKING CHAIRS, To prevent marrng your caseng and other furnture. No trouble to show goods. Yours Truly, G. A. SIGLER, PINCKNEY. Jucklen's Arnca Salve. OTATE OF AIICH1GAW County of THK P»r:sT,,a O L vn-jston. ss. At a sesson of SALVE n the world fo the cuts, bruses, sores, ulcers, salt rheum,! J' 1 '"^ t'omt for <ad County, held at every couny. and on nearly every j fev^r sores^tetter. chapped hands c'h'l'-' t»» J J'l'""^" ( >t'tce n the Vllage pf arm, n the southern and central sec- j blans, corns and all skn eruptons, j Howell on Frn v the twenty-eghth lons of the S-.te, and n many of the and postvely cures ples, or no pay day of.lunv n the ver one thousand mure northern countes. mpred. It - guaranteed to a'we eght hundred and eght-nne. Present." perfect sat>facton, or money refunded. I'ree 25 cants per box. For sde In the matter of f le Estate of Charles Fshbeck,.fudge of Probate. In the frst and second ters of countes, t'ual ng from the so tub lne of j by K. A. Sgler. MAKY PLC MM Kb', Deceased. the Slate, they were f-uul on nearly '.'0 par cent of the wheat heads; n the An Invurable Sgn. t hnt ter, 70 per cent; n the fourth Swellng of the ankles or (Vet when ter. 0,( per cent, and n the central and ma thern countes about 55 per cent. They were most numerous n St. j lo-t!;, Kalamazoo, Monroe, Jaeksm, dseased, '.1 heart. ' \ } says, s always caused by a weak or : Thereupon, t s ordered that Mon- So s shortness of. Jay, the ^0. h <!ay ot.inly next, at one LOOSE'S REO CLOVF-R P!LE r.2wlecy,. ',,. ' ' 1 breath, pan or uneasness when Ivmg o'clock n the afternoon, be assgned s ; postve specll' for al form-, - l't l'l'hatn r ha- outlook and \ an lor Jmren com s countes on the left sde, smotherng c p-'lls. less ]>rov.s ng that 111 dulv 1, for a mmott of for ^1»' hearrlt of.-ad petton, and dsease, llnd. lbelt.o', ten: The only cure s Dr. Mles* New Cure. ut'ct Sold at F. A. Seder's. and all other p<->r-ons nterested n sad tldtth.e 1KMrs at law of -ad deceased, cerated ;tnd protrudng ple P 3 50c. For sale sae bv.f. A.SaUa'. ale, years. 1 He average comnton com-, estate, are re-qare to appear at a sesson of sal Court, th.-n to be holden at VETERINARY SURGEON.» - _.,, M], ; h v ; Ullty am] vth of avy^ "_ T ^ / ~ ; ~ - " 7 ^ GRADUATE OF THF, - -^.. OlAIL Or M It HldAN, Countv of,-^-.., UI1HUU.UC ur,ne rn'p \'Tr OV M1CHIO \\ Countv of' :1 '^' ; ' vears s, nf the sou hern countes,! S t -,, ^,, Af,. ' a'. the ProLa'e Otce, n the vllage of * -',. *<v MflNTRfFI UFTFRI- W uu,llllr ' uv ll """),u ', k_j Jjvncrstot. ss. At a sesson ot tle oe, Howell, why and the show prayer cause, of the f any pettoner there,. ;. mu«nncl wc tn j^^vjj^rston, ss.- At a se.^o of the j tl per cent; n the central, 50 per cent, 1 Probate Court for sad Countv, held at NERY COLLEGE.., n,..->.«., -.,,.. should not be granted, Probate Court for sad <\>unty, held at ; un,-< ; u t } u, northern 40 per cent, Has had nne years of 4l.,, { m ^ [n {hq Vla-e ot the Probate. Othce n the vla-je of, Mr) Jf.,..-/,'/ oractcal experence. the Probate ;,?,*,u..,a.,^ *u +..-^ svc'.'-*a Treatment of all Do- Howell, on Tuesday, Cue the 10th day of The condton of other crops s for u \\r j J,,",, T,.1 Ana t s turther ordered that sad...r:. ^,,«-stc anmal,- n a pro- j j u v j n the vear one thousand fght I the State as follow- Oat- 00 ota- Howell, on Wednesdav tle 1/th dav o,.:.-,,. -.,, f ;,*.! '.- '.s-,..jjr ^ fesslor -.-.~u;l manner. A 1L M I.. tals promptly attended hundred and eghty-nne..., -,,.-,.! pettoner erve notce to the persons Oflke at Parker's Brut,' More, Charles Fsh beck,.ludgo of Probate.lulvm the year one thousand eprht, nterestpd n sa d.state of the pends-1; tmothy meadows and pastures, 80; In the matter of the Estate of,, Nrl. M 01,,,,,, V; ncred r a M T'fr^p F? nt: l n,c.v«fsa-l poton, and the hearng LEVI CLAP SOX, deceased >t t ; t, and toes, of HI: clover clove,- sowed meadows ths year, and pastures, 93. In ; Charles lshbeek. Judge of Pronate.,,^,^,- {)V ^ - ^ ;( (;opv of tbs M 0 )n readng ad hljng the petton, du- the State IDG correspondents report In the matter of the Estate of j t0 be publshed m the -Pmekney Pts- Bv HrtKT llnw: B.\NT.orr. b V verfed, of Margaret Wassort pray- ( more, and o5d le-s potato bug* than HlAL PEHRY, Deceased. j PATCH," a newspaper prnted and crcu- Drawn largely from ng that admnstraton ot sad omatr On readng and tlng the petton, j ^tn n('baulks FtsnnXK. usual. - ^;lrl eo'nty. three successve may be granted to Samuel Was^m or j duly verfed, of Grant S. Burgess the f xv - eks A true copy. I Judge of Probate. p'^vous to sad day of hearng. some other sutable ]u>vson. App.es A pole- n the southern, Exeeutor of sad estate pray n : for Thereupon, t s ordered that S.-.tur-' Jroms^ 77 per cent, n the. central 57 Thousands n every part j j lcense Thereupon, to sell t certan s ordered real that estate M01- of day, the 17th day of August, next, at ' per cent, and n the northern countes 00 per sad day, deceased. the 10 day of Autrust next, rt on- LOMESEXTRACT 1 10 o'clock n the forenoon, be ;:-h;h.1 l. l. ut - (,f ar avera^.;crop: and peaches forthe hearng of sad pel ton, and,. lu, soutl]pnl countos promst> 74 per that the hers at law ot sad do. eased. 1 ' j and all other persons nterested n sad j c ^ ol^ :IU average crop. Only 1-11 "V J '' to day or nsrht. Howell, Mch,... HISTORY OF ALASKA : From the earlest perod to the present tme. h. vvd narratve of most pecular nterest; orgnal, truthful, thrllng. KnsBtan sources now tlrst revealed, ( Ths hook, complete n one volume, wt!) ndex, 1B now rlrat ssued separate fronr the complete set of Mr. Bancroft's far-tamed hstorcal seres ' of thrty-nne volumes Of otr land wll aval themselves of ths prvlege, and buy and read wth avdty ths hook. The 1 knowledge whch t contans s ot ntense nterest, ana mportance, and much of t s found nowhere el*e. Plnckney Exchange Bank. j... G. W. TEEPLE, PROPRIETOR. DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS. Money Loaned on Approved Notes. DEPOSITS RECEIVED. Certfcates ssued n tme deposts and payable on demand, COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY. Steamshp Tckets tor Sale* o'clock n the afternoon, be assgne! for the hearng of sad petton, and that, tre hers at law of sad decease 1. and all other persons nterested n sad estate, are requred to appear at a ses-! correspondents reported the prospects estate, are requred to appear at, a son of sad Court, then to be holden at for peaches. sesson of sad Court, then to be holden the Probate Offce, n the Vllage '^'j,,,,,, m y at the Probate offce, n the Vllage of Howell, and show cause, f anv there! Howell, and show cause, f any thenbe. why the pray«r of the pettoner be, why the prayer of the pettoner j _ LOOSES'RED CLOVER PILLS CURE SICK should not be granted. leadaehe. dvspep-a, ndgeston, con- j should not be granted. And t. s further ordered that sad ^patam. 25e per box. 5 boxes for ST. And t s further ordered that sad pettoner gve notce to the person-) For s;tle bv F. A. Sgler. nterested n sad estate of the pen- 1 dency of sad petton, and the Inurng j thereof, by causng a copy of tns order Don't Whp a Sck Horse, ';M. P, to be publshed n the "Pnckney Ps-1 Xor take Catharc Plls when yonv BATI-H," a newspaper prnted and cr- bowels or lver are sluggsh. They dlatng n sad county, threo succcs- are whps. Put try -once, a least sve weeks prevous to sad day of (Mles' Xerve-aud Lver Plls. They? On readng and tlng the petton, duly verloj. of.joseph W. Pluramer executor of sad estate prayng for ltp.se to >ell cr-rdn real estate where-.,, t ,, ot'te sad ^.Iarv Plumtuer ded sezed not due to rheumatsm, Prof. Pet osta ',, n<l,, n.,., lll'l po >s ey. - I. pettoner gve'notce to the persons nterested n sad estateoflhe pendency of sad petton, and the hearng thereof, by causng a copy of ths order to tl be publshed n tle "Pr.ckney. Ds-! BATCM;'a newspaper prnted and cr- hearng. Ct.vs. Pstnm K, 1 act through the nerves. Samples free j hearng. CHAKLKS FVUBWK. (A true copy.) Judgo of Probate. I at P. A. Sgler's, '/' {A true copy.) /Judge of Probate fjloyer DL0SS0M < \* 0» TRASS 1UBS ftfe^ajgft' CUhltlllg n sad county, three succes- Rbeum, Catarrh, Ejy«p*Jaa, Rheumatwa, svrt WPAW nrevnk to d dflv of * n d all Blood and Skn DUeaaea. M\ e weex> p. \ on. o> >wa ua\ ol ^ ^ t l ^,. pj nt ^,,,^ or 6 Bottles for $3. 1 lb. c»n Sold Extract J. M- L006K&EJ} CLOVER CO, Detrot. Mck.

6 fl-mmt*-*-*- f;;t fc. It>v. THE STATE. B1''T. or MICHIGAN", \ [ HE REPUBLIC, > >M, JULY 13, l89. ) * To the Hcblra G. A. R. Department Commander Mchael Brown has ssued the followng order to the G. A. R.: HBAD0.CARTEK3 DltP'T. OT MICHIGAN', GUANU AUMY OJ» TH Bu UAPIU: CIKCULAR XO. 2. After long contnued and bonaflde efforts on the part of a large number of the department commanders of the Grand Army of the Kepublc, supplemented by earnest appeals to the ralroad offcals from our commander-n-chef and executve councl of Mlwaukee, we have faled to secure for the old solders the customary rate of one cent per mle traveled to and from the natonal encampment, to be be held at Mlwaukee, Ws., durng the last week n August. Jn vew of the fact that a rate of one cent a nule and less has receutly been gven to other organzatons, socetes and excursons, there s a general feelng that the men whose servces and s crfces alona maue t possble for the ralroads to exst und share n the prosperty whch has attended the nuton n recent years are enttled to the rate asked for and whch has recently been accorded to others... Frmly belewug that the refusal to gve sad rate of one cent a mle traveled s an unjust dscrmnaton agaust the veterans of the late war, I therefore n concurrent acton wth the department commanders of Indana, Illnos, Kentucky, Mssour, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska and Mnnesota, who have and wll ssue crculars smlar to ths n ther respectve departments, advse all comrades of ths department, as a matter of self-respect and self-defence and out of love for our order, that they forego the antcpated pleasure of meetng ther comrades at the natonal encampment by remanng at home, only those attendng who are duly elected delegates or ex offco members of the encampment. Comrades,-let us be dgnfed but resolute and determned n ths matter, and manfully resent ths great njustce sought to be meted out to the men who gave the best.years of ther lves und ther best energes to make our country unted, strong and prosperous, and our tag as well as our laws and our theory of government by the people respected and admred throughout the cvlzed world. 1 ssue ths crcular wth much regret. It wll be a great dsappontment to thou sunds of comrades n ths und other departments to have the antcpated grand reunon resolve tself nto a mere formal busness sessou. It wll also bo a great dsappontment to the comrades and patrotc cnzeus of Mlwaukee who are dong everythng n ther power to gve ther vstors a generous welcome. They are enttled to the thanks and best wshes of all the comrades of the Grand Army of the Kepublc for ther efforts, und t s to be regretted that we cannot wth any'degree of self-respect reward them or ther arduous labor by our presence uhe encampment. Personally I shall be greatly dsapponted. 1 had hoped to see the department of Mchgan very largely represented n the grand parade and revew, but wth a prncple nvolved, and wth the future good of our nobe order n vew, 1 beleve 1 am dong rght and that the comrades throughout hs department wll ndorse my acton. I wsh to way that 1 am nformed thnt some of tt.e groat ral road systems of ths country were n favor of the ouecentamle 'ute, but a n a orty beng opposed, they deemed t to be thcr'duty to agree to the r te announced, to wt: one fare for the round trp. I recommend that comrades organze county and dstrct reuuous and that each post have as many socal gatherngs as possble. Let us stand frmly upon the gre.t prncples of the fraternty, charty and loyalty. By command of MILHAKL BROWN, Department Commander. N. H. VINCENT, Assstant Adjutant-General.... Ilegvt* Meet. A specal meetng of the regents of the unversty was t.eld n Ann Arbor July 17. The followng nnrmaton'as to ther work has neon made publc :. The resgnatons of Dr. George K. Frothngham and Dr. Donald Maclean were accepted. Dr.Flemng C:rrow of Hay Cty was apponted professor of ophthalmolgy, vce Dr. Frothnghum, resgned, at a salary of $2,000. Dr. C. B. Nancrede of Phlade.pha was apponted professor of surgery and clncal surgery, vce Dr. Maclean, resgned; salary, $2,000. Dr. Aartn, who holds the char of ob- Btetrcs, formerly ovuped by Dr.Dunster, was contnued one year at a salary of *u,0)0. Mr. \V. H. Howells of Johns Hopkns unversty, Baltmore, was apponted lecturer n physology fur one year, salary $2, 'Dr. Paul C. Freer of Chcago was apponted lecturer M general chemstry for one year, salury $:,000. Ths char was held by Dr. Langley. who resgned to accept a poston n Pttsburg. Assstant Professor Ot.s C. Johnson promoted to the professorshp of appled chemstry, at a salary of $2,000. Dr. F.N.Cole, nstructor n mathematcs, promoted to actng assstant professorshp for one year: salary, $1,200. Prof. A. A. Stanley, professor of musc, was gven an ncrease of salary from (1,200 to $1,010. Charles K. McGec, nssstant n general chemstry at $50, appo.nted nstructor In general chemstry, salary 100. Instructor T. C. Trueblood was made assstant professor of elocuton at a salary of 1,1.00, wth a farther addton of $.00 for nstructon n the law department. Ths s for a full year s work. The followng appontments were maden the homeopathc department: Prof. D. A. McLachlan was transferred from the char of theory and practce of medcne tothenew char of ophthalmology, OtOOgy and «uhology, salary *2,000. Prof. Charles Catchall, M.D., of Chcago was apponted professor of theory and practce of medcne, salary $3,000. Charles S. Mack, M. I)., of Chcago, appo'nted professor of ma cra medca and therapeutcs, salary $2,tXX), vce Prof. H.U. Arndt, resgned lo accept a poston n Calforna. The resgnaton of Prof. Charles M. Guyley was accepted. He goes to Calforna to accept a 1,000 poston. The by law n relaton to the appontment of the deans of the facultes waschungedao as to k r ve the power of appontment to the board of regents nste.d O to the facultes. The chango s made so that young and vgorous men may be apponted to hold the responsble poston of clean. A. H. Pattengll. A. M., assocate pro lessor of Grok, was made a full professor. The appontment of assstants n the dental department was pccd n the hands of the executve commttee wth power to act. A vote of thanks wm tendered to varous frms wh3 have kndly donated machnery to the engneerng department and n connecton Wth th* t s somewhat surprsng to note from Prof. M. K. Coolcy s j^ep&rr, that the donatons of machnery whch have ber made amount to between $T,000 and $9,000, or an average of $1,000 per year snce the department was organsed. The matter of the locaton of the new hosptal was left n the hands of Retreats Kefer, Draper, Whtman und Hebard, wth nstructons to report at the next meetng. The regents then adjourned untl thor next regular meetng, whch wll be held n October. Mlk and Water Won't Mx. A certfed copy of the amended act to prevent the sale of mpure mlk n the state of Mchgan, approved -"J last, has been receved by the board of health. It prohbts the sale of unwholesome, watered, adulterated or mpure mlk, or swll mlk, or colastrun, or mlk from cows led on garbage, swll or any substance n a state of fermentaton or putrefacton, or from cows kept by famles n whch there are nfectous dseases. The addton of water or ce to the mlk s declared an adulu'ratou. It s the duty of all nspectors to make complant n wrtng to a justce of the peace or other qualfed court of every volaton of the act. W hoever sells, or otters to sell mpure or adulterated mlk s gulty of a msdemeanor, and s lable to a lne of $100 or. less and mprsonment for sx mouths or less. The same penaltes apply to persons sellng or offerng to sell skmmed mlk as pure mlk, un.ess the words "skmmed mlk'' are panted n letters one nch long on the ves sel or can; or offerng to sell mlk whch contaus more than MfOlOOths of watery flud, or less than three per cent of fats; or f the specfc gravty at 0degrees Fahrenhet s not between to 1 tt-looo. Any person who shall remove any cream from or add water to mlk, to be sold to a mlk factory, s lable to a lne of not more than $100 or mprsonment for not mora than W) days. The nspector's analyss of any suspected mlk shall be prma face evdence of aaulteratou n a prosecuton under the new act. Mchgan n the Combne. The Northern Amercan salt company fled artcles of ncorporaton n t:e secretary of state's offce n Albany, N. Y., ou the l th ust. Franku Woodruff, Horace K. Thurber, Wm. A. Hazard, and Chas. F. Burger are the ncorporators, wth a captal stock of $11.000,O.O dvded nto -'75,000 shares of $50 each. They say that they are to manufacture und sell salt and salt products n ther varous ramfcatons. The prncpal p<rt of ther busness wll be located n Warsaw. N. Y., but they wll also carry on ther busness n the followng places: Megs und Tuscarawas countes, O.; Aasou county, W. V.; Keno and Hce countes, Kan.; Hdalgo county, Tex.; St. Clar, Huron, Sagnaw, Bay and Iosco eouutes, Mch. The followng thrteen trustees, who shall manage the concerns of the company for the frst year, are named: Wellngton K. Burt, Frankln Woodruff. Horace K. Thurber, Wn, A. Ha.:ard. John Canreld, Wm. S. Conkln, Albert B. Boardman, Jay Morton, Kchard T. Wlson, Heury VV. Cannon, Chas. E. Burger, the Kt. Hon. Lord Thurlow and Joseph Verdu. Chas. F. Burger and H. Aplugton have pad the company's organsaton tax. amountng to $:,T;';0. Ths s the thrd 1 a-gest organzaton tax ever receved by the state. A Mandamus Dened. The supreme court has dened a mandamus n the ca e of he sle Koyalo land corporaton, lmted, vs. G. l. Osaut, secretary ol state. M.udams was asked for by relator compellng respondent to receve and fle n the state department ts artcles of assocaton, whch he had refused to do. It was not only an Englsh corporaton, but ts purposes were multfarous, undertakng under corporate powers to carry on upon Ise Koyae n Lake Superor, nearly all the ordnary an c tons n addton to the purposes defned n secton *_2, chapter 12l of the general law. 'Justce Campbell wrtes the opnon, n whch Chef Justca Sherwood and.)us;'e Champlu concur. It holds that the corporaton cannot by any such smple pnuess of lun^ ts Englsh artcles become, transformed uto a Mchgan company, when ts functons aro not wtthn any of cur staales. The corporaton cannot gan any kvjal st.uulng by flng ts papers under the exstng statutes wthout a subverson of settod prncples. Justces Long and Morse jon n a dssent rg,opnon, holdng that the secretary of state possesses no arbtrary powers and could nor refuse to rle; that the act of tlng artcles of assocaton would not enlarge ts powers beyond that of companes organzed under the stature. " The Salt Trust. E. D. Wheeock of Manstee, ono of tho most promnent salt manufacturers n the west, gves au outlne of the proposed nternatonal salt trust. The assocaton wll be organ./cd wth a captal of $20,00;), ooo and wll be n orporat-d under the laws of New York. ''There has be.-n a dsastrous war waged between producers n Mchgan and Kansas and New York,'' Mr. Wlee lock sad: "We have been shppng salt from Chcago, the dstrbutng pont, to places n Kansas, payng $1 per bol freght and solng t at *l ',0. We have a.so shpped t east at the same exorbtant rates. The Kansas and New York producers have been sendng sa.t nto our terrtory Wth lke result--loss ho'hto them and to us. Alter the assocaton s formed, each manufacturng pont wll be appor toned ts own dstrct. The loss on the long freght haul W:ll be adjusted, and prces wll LO up 10 cents a barrel." The assocaton wll begn busness on Jnnuary 1 next. W. K. Burt of Mchgan, wll bathe frst presdent. CI the stock, *.'),000,000 wll be hexd by Englsh captalsts. Weekly Crop Report. The weekly crop bulletn for the rraek end ng July 1U shows the mean temperature to have been 1-1 degreos above normal. Tne total ranfall was.52 below the average. The amount of sunshne has been above the average, and the effect, unon all growng crops has been benefcal. Cora has made rapd progress. Hayng s/«.\vell along, and s about fnshed n the southern secton. Wheat harvest has been commenced n several southern countes, but s not general. Reports ndcate that wheat s rpenng rap dl.v, but not evenly, and fears of damage frun the grun aphs arc rapdly dmnshng. Oats, barley and potatoes ara n fne, condton Pnt Arsenc n the Tea. Horace Sebrght, ngod W, of ThreeOaks, has been arrested carged wth poson.ng hs father, mother und sster. Sebrght wanted to marry a grl.who refused hm on account of hs poverty. The farm was wlled to Sebrght. Ho bought arsenc,at New Carlsle, statng that he wanted t. to poson rats. Ho refused to drnk the-tea and was the only one n the famly not affected. He lofused to go for assstance-nntl forced to, and told the neghbors that the famly WHS posoned from tho tea. Those who drank t are stll u a crtcal condt.ou. _ An Englsh syndcate has purchased the B»ch brewng company a plaut at Lake I Lnden. --^ WOLVERINE ITEMS. State Senator C. O. Grffey, who recently resgned, has been apponted postmaster at Negaunee. Mrs. Harret P. Ellott of Adran, wdow of Col. Lyman a Ellott of the Fortyseventh Oho nfautry, has receved offcal notce of the allowance of an orgnal penson whch wll gve her $9,000 arrearage and $a0 per month. The large and splenddly equpped mll of W. L. & H. D. Churchll of Alpena was struck by lghtnng the other mornng and burned to the ground, only the boler house beng saved. The loss s gven at $100,000; nsurance $::0,000. The mll wll be rebult No lumber was destroyed. The burungof the mll throw* 180 men out of employment. The mll contaned a crcular saw, bandsaw, gangsw and all the best modern applances, and manufactured last year 21,- 000,000 feet of lumber. The grand lodge of tho Sons of St. George was organzed ujsbpemug a few days ago. The fo.lowng offcers were elected and nstalled: Crand worthy past preadept, Jas. Frebcock of Ishpemug; grand worthy presdeut, J. H. D. Steveus of Ironwood; grand worthy secretary, Wllam Catln of ron Mountan; grand worthy treasurer, John Kruse of Calumet; grand worthy messenger, Smon Knsman of Champon; grand worthy nsde sentnel, Capt. Sam. H..rrs of Lake Lnden; grand worthy outsde sentnel, G. W. Luke of Bessemer. The Sons of St. George have ganed a strong followng n the upper pennsula n the last two years, manly utuong Cornsh mners, and the present membershp n ths statu s over a,o\a). Nathan K. Averll of Jackson has been apponted a cadet at West Pont lor the thrd dstrct, wth Uchurd K. Fellows cf tho same place as alteru ate. The rvers and harbors on the eastern shore of Lake Mchgan beng mproved number ftteen, Col. Ludlow makes the followng recoumendarous for appropratons for the ensung year: Charlevox harbor and entrance to Pne Lake, $^2,000; Frankfort harbor, $"4,000. Peter Bshop of Bay Cty s under arrest charged wth sellng lquor wth only a government lceuso. Hs bar s en a boat anchored-off the mouth uf tho rver near Ca-at Ka b^ach. "Bshop says other boats landng at the beach sell wth a smlar lcense, and he proposes to test the law. Mss Nelle E. Porter, who was permanently crpple! by a Chcago & West Mchgan tran a year a^o, bus been awarded a» 1,000 verdct n tho crcut court of Kent county. The ralroad company wll appeal the case. Capt. George W. Fowler, ex cty marshall of Lansng, has nsttuted a lbel sut aganst the state Republcan for proclamng hrn a dead heat and statng that hs name was on the blacklst of the LauSUg Busnes* Men's Assoeat m. G. A. H., men of Bay Cty talk ol char terng a bteamer to take them to Mlwaukee. John Ftzgerald «St Brother of Lncoln, Neb., have been awardej the coutract for buldng the extenson o"f the Chcago & West Mchgan road. They were the lowest of 24 bdders, ther Estmate beng $(,4f)0 per n.e lor 75 mles. Mrs. Dell Smth of Holton, has sued Maud Anderson and her bondsmen for 45,000. The Anderson woman keeps a saoou and Mrs. Smth says she sold So^h lquor that made hm so drunk he Tell down and broke hs leg. The Mchgan ralway passenger agents have arranged the followng schedule of specal rates: One fare lor round trp to solders' am sadors' reuu.ons at Pontne and West Branch ; one ceut aul a half each way from nl ponts to encampment of state troops at Go-'uac lake, and one fare and a thrd for round trp to e-ampucetng* n' varous parts of tho state. All specal rates made wll expre alter August!U. James I. Chrstancy, a son of ex Senator Chrs'ancy of Mchgan, was marred n Baltmovo, Md., a lew days ago t Edth May Phllps of Washngton. Mrs, E. \\ T. Wthey of Grand Kapdk has become nsane through gref, and has been taken to tho asylum at Traverse Cty. Johu Slack of Bg Hap.ds haabeen sentenced to twenty years n Jackson for assaultng hs daughter. Wllam McKcllop, presdent of the- Frst Natonal bank of Lorunna, fell n wth a sharper the other day, and was nduced to purctusc a par or gold "brcks,." payng therefor ^4,0.10, Then the swndler skpped out. The brcks were mude of copper and plated wth gold. A Warrant has been sworn out for the sharper, who s known to MeKellop by the name of Streeter. Muskegon s to have a bg Muccahea jnblee August H, wth przes lor the best drlled-unformed rank, band contest,, and the Maccabee tent havng the most meu n lne. Benjamn G. Lcoms- of Akron, Tuscola county, and Cornelus O. Best of Prescott, Ogemaw county, who were charged wth perjury n makng affdavts for a penson, have been dscharged. I'.'.van Crbom of Mnnstque, s nbautto start a Swedsh newspaper at Manstee, to be known as the Manstee I»o*-leua Aedborgdre. The agrcultural college wll be greatly benefted by the buldng of the Traverse Cty extenson of the Chcago & West Mchgan ralway. The route runs thwough valuable hnds belongng to the college and the prce thereof wll be greatly enhanced. The Grand Rapds & Indana alro;d folks say they can buld no extenson ths year on account of the 2. cent fare law. Ex-Supt. George Barnes cf the state school lor the blnd, has purchased the Lvngston County Kepublc,n of Orrn Star, and wll remove to Howell. Prof. Benj. Owen, a muscan, of consderable note, ded n shpemng a few days a.'o. He was a natve of Sweden-and came to ths country 'M years ago wth Ole Bull. Charles Brand, propretor of the Gate house n Lousng, has been arrested for sellng lquor wtho-k a lcense^ Mss Louse, daughter of Dr. Stephenson of Adran, was thrown from, a buggy the other afternoon ard nstantly klled. Edw.rd Manor of Coldwatser has been sentenced to fve years n Iona for horsestealng, Marcus Barker of Mchgan, a geographer n the geologcal survey at a salary of?.500, has beer* promoted to tho grade of 'opographer at a salary of $;j,000. Prof. C. It. Van Hese of the Wsconsn state unversty, who has consented to devote hmself entrely to work wth the geologcal survc-y^has had hs salarv ncreased from $2 t 40J to $4,.000. He wll have charge of the surve-.y's work n tho Lake Superor dstrct, whch ncludes Mchgan. The state commssoner of bunkng has called upon all banks for a statement of ther condton at the close of busness July 12. A petton s beng crculated n Kalamazoo askng that the resgnaton of Prof. Johnson from the agrcultural college be not accepted untl he s granted a full nvestgaton as to the causes whch, led to "the re ;uejt, for hs resgnaton. Fred. C. Fowler, a machnst of Eaat Sagnaw, has skpped to Canada, leavng a famly and numerous credtors to mourn for hm. He bet so heavly on Cleveland's electon 1-st fall that he haa been unable to arrange fnancal matters satsfactorly. A new char of ophthalmolgy, otology and pathology has been establshed n the homeopathc college of the unversty. The char of pathology and hstology n the unversty has been consoldated, wth Dr. Gbbes as the occupant. John W. Mas* n, manager of the southeastern "Mchgan telephone dstrct, embracng the terrtory from Cold water to Toledo, and north to Jackson, has resgned. He goes to Kansas Cty to take charge of au electrcal warehouse, and K. S. lnker tf Flnt succeeds hm, Lester J. Perry of Ironwood has been apponted a member of the edtng board n the offce of the war records n Washngton. Hon. J.C. Ford, agent of the Sprng Luae ron company of Frutport, lost an envelope contanng $c0j on a uorth-bound tran near Shelby. A boy pcked t up, and not knowng ts value threw t nto the comer of the car. Snce then t has not been seen. Clyde Weelng of Tecumseh, aged 10, wab found dead n bed the other mornng. Charles Flemng, a merchant from Sydney, Australa, h»s been n Grand t pds, buyng furnture to shp- to hs far-away home. John P. Burton, the Gogebc ron kng, has made an assgnment and wll be forced to the wall. The labltes reach $^5,000, whle hs ussets wll not exceed I70J.0OO, Burton says tout ho has been drven to bankruptcy by hs cred.tors, who have runed hs credt aud sacrfced hs proper ty. A new furnture factory wll soon be n operaton n Buchanan. The Washburn gold mne at Wakefeld has been closed down. Mrs. Sco-bogo-no ws of St. Ignace, ded a few days ago, aged 100 years. Charles Blockett of Oshtemo ttempted to jump on amovng tran at Kalamazoo to go to Battle Creek, but mssed hs hold, fell under the cars aud was terrbly cut and brused. The pardon board has been re-organ:ed by the electon of S. L. Klbourne of Lan sng, presdent, and Dr. George l. lchards of Detrot, vce presdent. Wllam Crosby, a clerk n tne Governor's omce, was re elected secretary. The commssoner of pensons has apponted penson examnng surgeons for Mchgan as follows: At Adran, Drs. F. B. Nelson and- Clfford Krkpatrck; at Ann Arbor, Dr. F. K. Owen; at Three Hvers, Drs. H. H. Phllps and D. J. Nchols; at Hartford, Drs. E. A. Palmer aud F. B. Dumngs. Capt. Jostah K. Hendryx, ono of the best known men of southwestern Mchgan, ded at hs home n Decatur, a few days The tenth annual reunon of,1he Nnth Mchgan nfantry wll be held n Fowlcrvle August '^-2'6. Two of the largest wooden vessels on the great lakes aro beng bult at Davuson's shp yards n Bay Cty. Convct Algren's murderous attack upon a fellow prsoner at loua has been dec.arcd by the coroner's jury to have been the result of carelessness on the part of an at tendaftt, ; nd tho prson management s held nnocent. Maj. Geo. B. Davs of the war records oflce at Washngton has sent to lona for copes of Gen. James II. Kdd's admrable lns'c ry of tho calvary lght at Gettysburg between Cust'jr s Mchgan brgade and Stuart's confederate dvs.n, to be n the lbrary of the Unted State-, mltary academy at West Pont, the calvary a socaton lbrary at F>rt Leavenworth, aud for the war records oul.-e. Thomas H. Ms her, a well known ctzen of Manchester, fol from hs steps the other day and broke hs nock. Mss Emn M. (lbert, assst ut superntendent of tho sta o ndustral home for grls at Adran, has been apponto.1 superntendent of a smlar nsttuton at Chll cothe, Mo., aud wll leave for her new post August 1. Fred C. Stone and J. W. Campbell, students n the agrcultural co.ege, have been suspended for "hazng." Justce Charles D.Long of the supreme court h..s receved *<,000-oack penson. Escatuba has two mles of ore docks dovoted to coal, lumber and merchandse. The Cochrane roller ml factory at Escanaba wll complete ts frst mllng machnery tor the market by Aug. 15, The survey of the Chcago & West Mchgan read to Traverse Cty has been approved. Prof. W C Hewtt of Unon Cty has accepted a char u tho agrcultural college of South Dakota, and wll commence hs dutes n l^'.o. Grand army veterans all over Mehzan, are angry because the ralroads wouldn't concede a one cent rate to the natonal encampment at Mlwaukee, und they wll aosjy slay at home. J. H. Reynolds of Adran and G. G. Wooduasce of Marccllus, havo been admtted to practce before the nteror do partmeut. Steamshp m-dl servce has boon establshed between Holland and Ottawa le,.ch, twce daly, except (Sunday. The fourth annual conventon, of the Mchgan busness men's assocaton wll be held at Muskegon on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, July oo und ll and August 1. James Waters, who has lved a.hermt lfe on Horse sland at the mouth of the Detrot rver, for some -'.{) years, ded re cent.v. Hs only companons were, two dosrs and -.0 cats.' He supported- hmself by sellng wld ducks and geese. Aaron Prce, for over 50 years a- resdent of Adran, s dead. The Mchgan st*te holness assocaton wll hold ts annual encampment sx mles north of (^oruuna, commencng' August 1 and lastng one week. The regular Oho pcnc wl be held on the farm Hram Harng of North Shade, Gratot county Every Oho m, m n Grat'ot, Clnton, Iona am Montcalm countes s nvted to come and brng hs wfe. HaLrond offcals clam that Glmore's ralroad blls wll affect tho through fares of every road n the couatry more or less. A ahanty near Caro, occuped by Rchard Uhapraau, was burned, the other n'.ght, and Chapm,n pershed n the Humes. The Wndsor mal pouch stolen from the Sooth Shore ralroad near the Son Lst November has been, lound by tho staton agent at Sault uncton. It had been stolen from a tran there and carred nto tho woods and rfled, b>ut tho ob must have been clone n a hurry us he theves dd not get a package coutaung$,l n cask Over *l,0>0 n regstered matter was taken from the bug, howevor. The green mdge has serously damaged the oat crop n southern Mchgan. Charles Hood loll under a bg log at Black Rver the other day, wd waa utuutly klled. John Palmer, a mtaer at Ironw blown to shreds the ober dajr by Ue expoaloo of a can of dynamte. An Imlay Cty farmer attrbutes th* Unusually large crop of noaqutoea ths summer to the absence of swallows. He aay» that the wet, cod weather of the early sprng starved these brds, so that wberf tnere were thousands last year tuemojv none ths. A. M. Dowey of Detrot, for aome t«0 p.st publsher of the Journal or Uo e4 Labor n Phladelpha, has severed hs connecton wth that journal. Grand Ledge wants some one to buld B3 tenemeut houses, aud guarantees to fll them as soon as they are bult Fro ok Reams of Greenvlle, has beca sentenced to IV years n Jackson for tryng; to force an entrance nto Mrs. James Crawlord s house. The regents have authorzed a course of study n the unversty of Mchgan lead to the degree of bachelor of scence n trcal engneerng. Ths course w* parallel wth those n cvl, mechanc; mnng engneerng, wth the s tme re-fj meats for admsson. The naw phy laboratory has sx rooms specal.y dus, for electrcal and magnetc work. John Boulton, for over»0 years a resdent of Joncsvlle, Hllsdale county, n dead. The supreme court has affrmed the verdct of $10,000 reudered n laus uganst Detrot and u favor of Wllam A Coots, a freman, who was thrown from hs engne, because of a delect n the streot, and badly njured. Rev. J. H. McCullough, a graduate of Adran college, bus been chosen presdent of hs ohu,.atf. The body of Wm. Bullard, aged 78, a resdent of Pennsylvana, was found on a farm n Pnlmyr«,Lenawee ounty,the other day n a stale of decompostons He bad been to Blssfeld, where he expected to lve wth a Btep son, but tho latter lcoula. not fnd t conveoh nt, and so to d tbvotd man. It seems to have s ddened hm and he left one mornng wthout sayng anythng, and t serns that le took laudanum and ended hs Lfe. Ezra Wsner, father of Hon. C. W. Wsner, suddenly d ed of apoplexy tho other mornng wftle sttng on the porch at hs resdence n Clo, uged»1 years. He waa born n Cayuga, county, New York, and came to Genesee county n 1849 where he has snce resded. He was never ll, nover used tobacco or lquor u all hs lfe, bult a saw mll at Brch Hun n 1*50and manufactured plank for the Sagnaw and Flnt plank road. L.keCty wll pav $25,000 to have the Toledo & Ann Aroor ralroad como that way. Mrs. Rta Johnson, a colored woman, has just ded n Ann Arbor, aged 10JT years. A famly named Sebrng, lvng near Three Oaks, were posoned fro a dr.nknjf tea the othor nucht. For hours the entre famly was n a very crucal condton. Ou June 15 Wllam Bullard went nto tho Wellsvlle postoteo und gave orders. that all m ll addro^sed to hm should be sent to the dead letter offce. Snce ths he hns not been seen alve. July 18 hs dead body w s found on L. I). Alexan or s farm and besde hm w,.s found a bottle of poson. Basl Phelps of Green Lake, Grand Traverso county, tlu; o.dest man u the county, s dead. ^ A. B. Dougherty of Elk Rands has been apponted to a poston n tho sen te foldng room ou hu recommendaton of Senator Stuckbrdge. THE MARKETS. Detrot Wheat-No. 1'n IH-d red M)c Oals, -JH'vc. M rtcst., No a red 74c. Corn, y'jc. Apples -New southern, 85(^400 per >j'-bu bo\;»1..0 c aorer bbl. as per qualty; fancy.. Butter Best selectons, n Inrge lota, 11(«).tj-fc'c; cou.unm and streaked, SfujIOo; choce fresh, creamery, ll.(glc; -luney r lsc; oleomargarne, :S(ul5e. Berres Gooseberres, & 50(Vr3 per stauadrug; raspberres, black, *3($.'1.')0 per bu; rod do, &J7*ot4.; blackberres, Lawtons, TS>U' ' per stand and rare, recopta mostly soft; whortleberres. <7, Beans Dealers are offerng $1.65(0)1.70 for hand pcked lots. Loo 1. Cheese- 1'u 11 cream, S(/20c. s per qualty. Cabbages New, $1.^(0)1.50 per j bbl crate. Cucrrcs :'('t"j ";0 per stand for sour. Currans 7v,c^^l per bu; supply large; a drug. Dressed Meats -- Beef, 4(/*7c per lb; VJUI, b(«t.c; mutton, ^(o;oc; sprng lambs, lj-.oc. '.gjrs l'4v;c per doz; sngle crates, 13c. Prces l m and regular. Flour.Mchgan patent,$5(^)5 25 por bbl; roller process, ; Mnnesota paent, $o(as ) '2o; Mnnesota bakers, 0(¾. > 50; rye hour, $a -5. Fsh Fresh whtctsh and trout f>c per \h; bass, c; dressed c t c; No I pckerel *.c; No 2 do, ;;c; sturgeon, Go; grass pke» 'IC. Grapes $1 25((11 50 por 10-h basket. 1.reen corn l/j.^e per doz. n ears. per lb ; No 2 do, Hdes -No 1 green, 4e 2^0; No. I cured, 4;*c: part cured^ -c; No2* IJ^C; buds..ud stags, s^c; No I cafskna^ 4^c; No2 do, -'le; deacon s green, l;>v't<25o; ury do 10...~»c; No 1 veal kp 4c; No 2 do>.c; No 1 cured calf ard kp, )v,'c- hgher. Sheep pelts, 75c(y-} 00, as per quantty of wool. Hay In c.r lots, Tmothy, No L,,.*11@ l. por tou; INO,: do, ^lo^-t 1; clover, (oj6. Straw, *4 ooct.> 50. Hay IOOSO pressed, *7; n wagon. Uns.* 100.5l>; str.w, loose pressed, ','(($ 11; do n wagyu lots, $V).ll). Unons--Southern,?j 40(VT>2 50 per by. f>- $12(0,1:1!» : '! ' I- Provsons Mess por;;, per ob, famly,?12(o,2 <5; short *l.(<tl;l :.5: lard, u terces, rened, ketllo j.)'ujn', 4 c: small clear o> 4 ($ pack- ;tal2o: {)}.,c per u>. uses, usual dfference; hams,. 11, IV, shoulders, 7 («< 7>:jc, bacon, 1 O^lO.t-4o; dred. beef hams, 9<u>IOo extra; mess,beef m rket b.re, prces nomn.l; plalo beef, Jw 50(¾¾. Potatoes Ohos, 1 10(( l 20; Tenneaseea, $1 2..(rtl 40. Pou.try Lve, old roosters, 4c; fowl*, 8; ducks, old Ic; young \tu0o; turkeys, 9c: pgeons, 25c per par; aprag chckens, 12c per tb. Plums Choce wld goose, per stand tg(a),.,., > Salt whteflfth per bbl; trout: Tomatoes Kecepts large; com 30c per ^-bu box. Taluw nest grndes '.Yj^c per lb. Woo Fne washed f!<s?cea, 'J'JC coarse do ; Oc: medum :<2c. Watermelons 2. (rfloc ^sporsle. L. ve Mooc. Cattlo Extra steers, $ ($\ 20; choce do, $4 0.<<)4 15; good do, fcj fe0^4; choce heavy butchors, t (.>0(<$t; tned.uuv 1 utchera' steers, fc K. ( 3 K>: lght handy butchery &; :.0^ 10; choce stockcrs, 2 70(^3; feeders, & 7u\<r. Hogs Market arly Motve and frm; lsrnt, 4. ;< 4.&0; rough packng, *4.20((^ >; mxed $4.;'(*4.56; heavy packng and shppng, $4.30(.^4.40. Sheen*-M.trhet steady; muttons, $y 50(4 6 20; lumbs, H 7C@J; Tcxuns, ft ^ > * * :.

7 w -yh ETERNAL LOVE. Ch^sy not that Love change*, ' n That Tuns or Death estranges Twn" souls! Tho' one t ranges The ampler atmosphere < Of heavenly felds elyslan Beyond tho other's vson, ", aay not, In derson, They are less near or dear, pes name, men but profane t! hart and sol and stan t, take t but n van t blasphemously blown mouths unmeet to breathe t. 0 sacred name! I wreathe t, 1 put all thngs beneath t, And worshp Love ulonel Earth's cruel bonds they bnd us, Earth's msts they Bhroud and blnd us; Can heaven's pure lght e er fnd us. Can earth dmmed eyer e'er see Tro' Tme wth fclrror hoary To read the wondrous story, To grasp the golden glory Of Love's eternty I BRIEF SORROW. CHAPTER n. BE you comng to church ths mornng, Tom?' "Oh.no not ths mornng, Mary!" 'You mjjht come sometmes, Tom!" put n Agnes, standng at the great hall door, tall and graceful n her well worn black jacket and her large black hat, whch had done Sunday duty through the summer. "Mr. Freke does not say anythng but he must notce that you are not at church." "Why, bless you, chld, the Vcar's as blnd as a bat! It's all that ho can do to read hs boo'c when t s at the end of hs nose! He wouldn't know hs wfe f ho had one" wth a sly glance at Mary outsdo of a quarter 'of a yard, let alone me half way down the asle. Besdes, I ve an engagement." Well, then, f you won't come, we must make haste." ' Where are father and mother?" Gone on wth Dan." "Well, I don't care f I walk as far as the gate w h you," sad Tom on bearng ths news. He and hs father tactly avoded one another now. As a chld, the son who.so strongly resembed Mr. Berkeley's dead wle had been hs prde and favorte; but, when he grew older and dsapponted hs guardans and teachers n every way, dsgracng the old name wth h-* wld and rotous dongs, brazenng out reproof and turnng a deaf ear to warnng, hs father was ready to gve up all hope of hm, and concerned hmself ehotly wth dong all ho could to preserve Dan the only chld of hs second marrage, a boy now nne years old from tho contamnaton of hs half-brother's nfluon e. Tom walked down tho avenue wth hs sster and cousn, whstlng softly as f 4n thought. When they reached the gates he paused, and let them g on alone. He dd not turn back to the house, but stood stll whstlng "Apple Dumplngs," but so slowly ard quotly that Mss Tregelles had mstaken t for hymn tune. "I wonder what Tom s medtatng?" observed Agnes, when they were out of hearng. "No harm, I daro say,' 1 returned Mary cheerfully, thnkng of the hymn-tune. "Oh, but ddn't you know that thero had boen another complant from the game-keeper at Lttleton Pt.rk? He ddn't wsh to expose hm; so he came hmself and spoke to father abort t last nght, and father went to Tom's room afterwards. It was after we "had :gono up stars mother told me ths mornng." "I am sorry!" Mary sad gravely. "Then there was that fuss on Wednesday nght, when he came home tpsy agan," Agnes went on. "We should all bo BO happy together If t were not for hm! We are very fond of hm nobody can help beng so, I thnk but f he would only be dfferent!" "Perhaps he wll some day," rejoned Mary, who had groat hopes of her scrapegraco etousn, and was hs beot frend after Fath Freke. Tom, left to hmself, contnued to stand at tho gates un'.l tho church bells had stopped rngng. If he was on the wateh for one party of chutvh-.< goers who must past by, he wated La ran, aud, as eleven struck, he turned Jus he^l and walked to the teott Manor was an nnoent ple. Tho Berkoleys were an Unty famly renowned In former tmes for ther bravery and patrotsm. Wescott Manor had been a gft from Henry V., to the Berkeley of the perod for fathful servce n hs French wars, and many a "deed of darrng-do" had made the famly famous. More than one Berkeley had refused a peerage, consderng tho )Uha name a greater dstncton than that could bo conferred. Of r«, however, the glory of tho had departed; poverty had m ts eons a gradual Ey of fortune whch became more apparent wth the advent of each successor to the Manor lands. Tho present Thomas Berkeley was most nconvenenced by the want of money, and would have lttle to leave behnd hm; he was therefore the mote anxous to ee hs sons well settled. The house was gradually fallng nto"decay; If Tom turned over anew leaf and settled down to somethng, bo mght make money enough to do up tat old place when he should come nto t; If not, then the Manor must go to run. Tom entered the house by the front door, whch opened nto a great square hall, hung wth ancent frearms and trophes of the chase n the shape of stags' heads, and foxes' brushes. He cams out of the house agan n a few mnutes pushng the protrudngend of a net nto hs pocket. He turned at once toward the hgh road, whch ran between the Manor grounds and the woods, so ntent upon hs present object that be had crossed the road and put hs foot upon the stle before he caught sght of fve lades comng along tho dusty road; they were flounced and f urbelowed and half concealed by parasols of varous hues nnd patterns; but he recognzed the party. He drew back hs foot and walked slowly toward them, a sudden Hush suffusng hs face. "Why, where are you off to?" was hs somewhat unceremonous greetng; but no clumsy words of hs could hde the pleasure he felt. Mss Derwent who Bnce Frday nght had now and then recalled the handsome boysh face that had taken her fancy, full of vvd and changng expresson, glowng too wth a sudden new-born admraton seemed pleased also, and a look of boredom, whch had produced one or two fant lnes on ner forehead and puckered tho corners of her mouth, makng" her appear rather old and haggard n the mornng lght, faded away. "Why to church, of course!" responded Mrs. Stephenson cheerfully. "We are late. I could not get those tresome grls to move quckly!" "Its a quarter past eleven," sad Tom n surprse; for they were punctual people at the manor, and he had had no experence of any other household. "Yes; are you comng wth us?" Thero s plenty of room n our pew. 11 Oh, no, thanks!" he returned quckly, thnkng of hs father and Mary and Fath Freke watchng hm come mo church n the mddle of the servce n company wth a famly whom he had never ceased to rdcule ever snce he couldp«$>eak. He could not endure that, thougtt'fe^a moment the temptaton had been strong to go a nd Bt besde Nna Derwent. "Well, tlfen, f you really won't, wll you come to us after church, and stay to our early dnner? ' proposed the wdow sweetly, showng a sudden predlecton for Tom's socety, whch certanly would have surprsed hm had he had a thought to spare for any one or anythng besdes that bewtchng face that traled at hm from under the lawn and pnk Pars chapeau. 'Wo dne early on Sundays, you know." Tho Stophensons dned early every day when they had no vstors, and, f any one of mportance dropped n unexpectedly at the hour of the md-day meal, they culled t "luncheon," and hastly mprovsed a late dnner f the vstor stayed long enough; f not, Of course ho or she could not possbly loll that only a vulgar substantal mddleclass tea followed at sx. "I well I thnk I wll," stammered the boy, hestatng and growng very rod nthe face. "Very well, then wo shall expect you. We dne at half past one; but. come as soon after servce as you lke. Come,.grls, we must be gong. An revor, fou." noddng and smlng. "I am so glad you arc comng," sad Nna Deweut, sloppng behnd the others. She spoke wth charmng frankness, and glanced up nto hs face so bewtchngly that tho flush on hs cheek* deepened. "And so am I," he answered wth dffculty. "We can talk over Frday nght together, can't we? and plenty of other thngs too, I daro say," "Oh, yes." wth more ease. "Good-bye. for alttle whle, then," and she went on wth the othrrs; and Tom returned home, qute oblvous of hs engagement; so that, f any of hs undesrable companons wero awatng hm n tho \woods that day, they wated n van. He seemed to know to a mnute when the servce was over, for the lades at Wstara Vlla Mrs. Stephenson's pretty cottage on tho hghroad had not had tme to take off ther out-of-door garments before ho made hs appearance, lookng much smarter than when they had seen hm last. Hs shyness so^on wore off. Nna Derwent showng herself so pleasant and frendly that ho was perfectly at ease before the others had fnshed dscus-ng the new bonnets that had been seen n church that mornng. After dnner Tom and Mss Derwent and Phylls and Betty went out nto tho garden behnd the house ahd- sat n the arbor. Mrs. Stephenson stayed ndoors for a nap, and Lousa kept hor company, ostensbly to read, really to follow her mother's example. The party n tho arbor fell to talkng about the nmates of the Vcarage. Tho Vcar was not n great favor wth the Stephenson's perhaps because ho had never looked twcjg at any of them, though the wdow had not gven up hope untl Mary Tregelles had ap- f penred upon the scene. Phylls and Betty perced Fath topoces; but Tom look her part warmly.,. 'I. ' -, ', s -- "' * " "She la a jolly grl/ 1 he declared "plenty of sense!" wth a sgnfcant glance at them from hs place at Nna Derwent'a sde, whch that young lady caught and duly apprecated, decdng at once that Tom was no undscfmnatlng country clown. ' I thought," she nterposed deprcatngly, as though askng an opnon rather than (stalng her own, "that bhe looked very stff and prm, and rather ungatnly ths mornng. 11»Well " Tom paused. He was about to say, "Compared wth you, perhaps she s;" but he restraned the blunt speech n tme. "She s onl(v a lttle grl," ho sad, "and wll undoubtedly mprove as she grows up. 1 ' "She s seventeen, 1 ' sad Phylls, lookng at Nna. "Well, that sn't very old," returned Tom ndulgently, as though he hmself were eght and twenty nstead of just eghteen. lut we must not say a word aganst the Frekes n present company," contnued Phylls; "for Fath and Tom's sster are nseparable has not Tom told you, Nna? 1 ' ".No, he has not," repled Mss Derwent, lookng surprsed and pentent. "X wsh I had know 1 would not have sad that. -Mr. Berkeley, I do hope I have not hurt your feelngs! I assure you that I never dreamt " "Hurt my feelngs? Of courso not!' nterrupted Tom, feelng hghly ndgnant wth Phylls. "She s Agnes's fretul what have 1 to do wth Agnes's frendshps?" rather roughly. "Talkng of your sster?" sad Mss Derwent gently, "she called here yesterday wth her cousn. What a lovely grl she s!" "They never told me!" "Dd they not?" rasng her eyes to hs n mld surprse. "Well perhaps they had no opportunty" recollectng that he had been out all the Saturday afternoon and untl late n the evenng, when, on hs return home, hs father had made nr. unwelcome clam upon h* tme and attenton. "She s so tall and graceful!" contnued Mss Derwent. "I do admre tall people don't you?" "No," sad Tom wth a glance at^the small fgure besde hm; and ^fna smled upon hm that smle whch she was well awaro was the most dangerous weapon n her armory, and used accordngly. 'Well, of course." she sad, "one does not expect brothers to admre ther ssters. They leave that for other people's brothers to do' archly. "Oh, Agnes s too young yet for anythng of that sort!" observed Tom. "Agnes and Fath used to have the same governess." remarked Betty. "Yes/ 1 sad Tom; "and the Vcar teaches Fath a good deal stll, and she manages to fnd tme for Laln and Greek and Hebrew, besdes keepng house. She s qute a clover l te thng, anl lkes learnng out of hs musty old books a great deal better than I ever dd.* 1 "You were a butterfly," sad Mss Derwent. n that half-accusng, halfadmrng way whch he found so flatterng. "And Fath was the boe, and got all tho honey?" he supplemented, "1 don't know about that ether." "You mean " "I thnk I got some honey too. though not out of books." "W.n mean that you have had a very pleasant lfe so far?" she questoned lghtly. "Yes; t has been very jolly on the whole. Not but that I thnk I could be a good deal happer" slowly, hardly comprehendng hs own words; but already he was learnng a new language. ',1 hope you wll be,", returned Mss Derwent softly, wth a sympathetc wave of her large black fan. "There's.a rng at the bell. I wll just run n and sea who t s,' 1 sad Phylls. "It was too foolsh sttng there watchng Nna tlrt wth a bt of a boy ten years youngerthan herself,"' she declared mpatently to Betty, who had followed her, not choosng to be left to dary-pcker. "I thn»k I shall bo whle you are here." -ad Tom, drectly the two grls were out of hearng, wth bashful boldness, ths beng hs frst attemot at a gallant speech. "Whle I am here?" echoed Mss Derwent, lookng at hm from behnd her fan, as he sat leanng forward wth hs elbows on hs knees, not darng to glance up after hs last venture. "Why, what dfference can that make?" "A good deal to some people." "But not to you? I have only mel you oneo before n my lfe. It s rather a pty, 1 ' sho contnued laughngly, "for 1 fancy you and I would have boen very good frends." "Well, can't wo be now?" Bo asked, lookng round eagerly at her. "You are not gong away for a long whle yet, of course?" Not just yet," she admtted. "Then we could be frends?" TO BE CONTINUED. Brg. Gen. Drum, who has just boen retred, s the frst prvate solder that ever attaned the rank of brgadergeneral n the regular army. FARM ASP HOME. 'fhm Shftless Farmer. Are you acquanted wth hm? Dd you ever see hm? He s your neghbor? The edtor of the Navasota (Texas) Tablet gves such a full and accurate descrpton of one that should you meet hm you could hardly fal to recognze hm. The edtor says the shftless farmer has a lfelong ambton to gan a reputaton for wearng a lrty shrt He wll alarm the neghborhood by gettng up two hours before day and then st around and not go to work untl after sunup. He wll rde around a week lookng for a two-dollar hog. He wll complan of hard tmes, then tear hs pants clmbng over a fence where a gat ought to be. Ho wll pay three dollars for a brdal, and then let the calf chew t to peces before Sunday. He gets all hs neghbors to help n gettng a cow out of the bog, then let her de for want of attenton. She wll get n and destroy hs crops at a place n hs fence that he has been puttng off fxng for sx months. He wll spran hs back lftng sometme to show how strong he s. He wll go n hs shrt sleeves on a cold day to show how much he can stand, and then return home at nght and occupy two-thrds of the freplace tll bed-tme. He wll rdcule the mechansm of a corn planter, and then go out and smash hs thumb nalng a board on the fence. #. He wll go to town on Saturday and come home wth ffty cents worth of coffee, a paper of pns and a dollar's worth of chewng tobacco. He s economcal; economy s hs j forte; he wll save tan cents' worth of axle grease and run the spndle of a seventy dollar wagon. He won'tsubscrbe for a newspaper, but wll borrow from hs frend forget to return t. and Tranng Hewers. The term "breakng" as appled to the domestc anmals cas an unpleasant sgnfcaton. II ndcates bad management forcbly remeded. A calf or a colt should be traned from ts brth, and t should be gradually led n the way t should go the word ' educated" has precsely ths meanng by a constant progressve course of knd and consderate treatment. A hefer calf should be weaned at ts brth. If ts natural nstnctve proclvtes are to be repressed and oblterated, ths s tho tme to begn, before the germs of these have had opportunty to grow nto a habt. Hence the calf should not bo permtted to suck tho dam and should bo taught to drnk from a pal. Have a leather collar strong enough to hold t, wth a rnjr sewn n t, and a rope wth a snap hook attached to te t wth n the pen. Then t should be handled (brushed s better) qute frequently, untl t s used to t and makes no resstance but rather lkes t. As t grows older ts udder and 1&.ts should be rubbed and pulled as f n mlkng. Ths not only makes t docle, but t helps the development of the udder and ncreases ts future capacty. A hefer may be brought to mlk n ths way before t has a calf, and nstances of ths lacteal precocty are not nfrequent n dares wher3 calves are permtted to suck each other, although ths s a great mstake and s provocatve of vcous habts, such as selfsuckng and suckng other cows. When tho hefer has a calf t s already tr.ned, and breakng, wth the dscplne of a club, a boot, or a mlkng stool, wll not bo requred. Cabbage After Early Potato**. To get a good crop of cabbage after early potatoes, t s only necessary to have good strong he lthy plants to commence wth. To obtan such, sow the seed n drlls, not less than one foot apart, and thnly n the row, the last week n May or the frst week n Farm Kotos. By experments t baa been found that clover fed wth corn makes a gan of thrty to forty per cent greater than a corn raton alone. Farmers n the Unted States who wsh to breed and brng out good saddle horses, should rde daly, or have sons who can constantly rde. Pgs that have the run of clover felds, wth slops made from bran and shpstuff, wll not reach the weght of those that havo a small addtonal raton of corn. Grass-fed cattle are much cleaner than those fed n sheds, but care should be taken that these "grassers" come to market wth ther coats n respectable condton. The head does not need a dense sheld to protect t from the sun. It does need a shade, but t also needs a crculaton of ar, whch a loosely woven hat. broad enough n the brm to cover the back of the head and neck, best gves. In makng poultces to use n warm weather use water nstead of mlk, as there s lets danger of t becomng sour. Crumb the nsde of a pece of bread, cover t wth cold water, and let t stand ffteen mnutes. Then bol tll smooth, and just thck enough to run; spread t on old lnen of four or fve thcknesses. \.^ We should hardly call t a system of rotaton of crops where the same one was rased upon the same land for more than two successve years. W T ould prefer a dfferent crop each year. Hay mght bo a possble excepton to ths rule; wth a good dressng of fne manure each year, land mght reman, to grass more than two years. When a few fows are kept on the ktchen scraps, they often, f rghtly managed, yeld larger returns than a 1-rge flock but half attended to. There U no dsputng the fact that all poultry requre careful management to make them pay, and when ths s done, nothng on the farm wll pay better. It can be tested and proven by anyone who thnks dfferently. Persons exposed to summer heats and oblged to exercse n the sun should by all proper means endeavor to promote perspraton. Excessve drnkng of ce water wll not do ths, though t wll probably lower the vtal temperature below the proper pont; nor wll dstlled or fermented lquors brng about ths healthy reacton aganst the heat, but water moderately cool and ut-ed freely wll do t. Cncnnat Enqurer. The Household. Souu CREAM PIE. One cup of sour cream, one cup sugar and three eggs. Use tho whte of an c^g for frostng and season wth lemon. HAM AND EJC;S. Soak ham over nght n mlk. In the mornng fry untl brown then remove to a platter. Fry eggs by dppng gravy over them untl done, nstead of turnng, then take off carefully and lay upon tho slces of ham. COCOANUT CUSTARD. Bol n a kettle of hot water two tablospoonfulls of corn starch and one quart of smmerng mlk, yelks of four eggs, sx tablespoon fulls of sugar. Bol three mnutes; add. when cold, one teaspoonful of vanlla and cover top wth grated cocoanut Serve wth plan cake. EGGS AND ASTAKAGUS. Bol tho tender parts of asparagus n a lttle salted water; when done dran and chop fne. Have beaten eggs as requred. Put the asparagus n a saucepan n whch s melted butter; pour r> tho eggs and cool three mnutes, strrng to prevent burnng. LEMON TOAST. Take tho yolks of three eggs, beat well and str nto a breakfast cupful of mlk; cut some stale bread n slces and soak for a mnute n the mlk and egg; then fry to a delcate brown n bolng butter, squeeze over a lttle lemon juce and sfted sugar, and serve very hot SUMMER SNOW. Soak one-half of a box of gelatne n one-half of a pnt of water one hour, add three cupfuls of bolng water, two cupfuls of sugar, June. One ounce of seed wll produce juce of one and one-half lemons. Set 2,000 plants, and f cultvated on good on tho back of the stove tll dssolved. sol wll produce the best plants n Stran, beat n the whtes of three* thrty days or by July frst Afte eggs beaten stff and mold. Pour dggng, tho potato patch should be sauce around. freshly plowed, and tho sol thoroughly pulverzed. My plan s then and qurtered apples, two-thrds cupful BAKED APPLES. One quart of pared to open furrows four feet apart and j of butter, two cupfuls of water. Put apply fve hundred pounds of some the apples n a bakng dsh, sprnkle good fertlzer per acre n these rows, wth sugar, and, after breakng fte coverng wth a corn cover, and set I butter nto bts' put t all over the top. the plants three feet apart on these Add the water and bake slowly for rdges. Cover them deeply, even f one hour, or untl the apples are-, the leaves are p rtly covered. Should tender. the sol be dry or a dry spell be lkely DANDELION SALAD. Select fresh, to follow, tramp around each plant green dandelon greens; wash and after settng. It s best to lft the place n a salad bowl. Just at the plants wth a dggng fork rather than moment of servng pour over the pull them from the seed bed, especally greens one tablespoonful of ol n f at all dry. Last year I sowed both Flat Dutch cabbage and caulflower seed on June 1st, had fne plants to set out June 20th, and had both cabbage and caulflower ready for market SoptapUMt 28tk whch s dssolved one saltspoonful of salt and half a saltspoonful of pepper. Ad d Ave tablespoonfuls of clear ol; tots Md pour over the whole one table- pconfcsl of vnegar, toss agan and* SV*» mmedately.

8 L kt\ h\ k\ Mk^tJkJk^hkMkMkJAh h A PRESENT! A PRESENT! A PRESENT! Durng the next THIRTY DAYS at the CLEAR Q THE " POB "WS JW»3S OOX3STO TO 6E0. W. SYKES & COMPA TOBXJY OTTH To every one purchasng $2.00 worth of Dry Goods, we wll PRESENT ONE TEA SET, A of the fnest qualty, and to every one purchasng $5.00 worth of goods, we wll One of our fnest BE2ATTTY! wth Sykes, one par Spx, regular made, no seams, at 12 cents, one of them Don't fal to call and see the gfts. Groceres, Furnshngs, HATS AND CAPS, ETC., ETC. Here Is My Memorandum: One Shrt, a bar Banner Soap, 5 lbs. Sugar, * lb. Dean's Bakng Powder and I must be sure and get that knd, one box Yeast Foam, 1 lb. Cod Fah, spool of Thread, one box Sardnes, one of those 50 cent Caps for John, J lb. of that 30 cent Fne out and I'll bet John won't know the dfference between that and the 50 cent Tobacco that 1 have been gettng before I traded thngs that women wear behnd for Salle Ann, and a Lamp Chmney, a par of 50 cent Harvestng Gloves, Dress for the Old Lady, one plug Jolly Tar, and I guess that's all hold on, the Old Lady sad, as I rode away: "don't forget the Frut Jars and one doz. Can Rubbers." Get the whole busness of GEO. W SYKES & GO Neghborhood News..» « PETTEYSVLLE, From Our Correspondent School wll begn Monday, after a vacaton of four weeks. Calvn Weller las sold one of hs farms to a Mr. Henry of Hudson. Mrs. Earl and daughter of Ann Arbor, are vstng at Mrs. Uenham's. Mrs. Blade of Hamburg, Sabbathed wth her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Weller. Mrs. Tndel and daughter Carre of Chelsea, vsted Mrs. Burroughs and son last week. Mr. Cbas. Burroughs and wfe of Chubb's Corners, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Peter; Sunday last. Mss Letta Mercer was the guest of her cousns, the Msses Orra and Franke Placeway of Unadlla, last week. Mr. Elas Culver and son and Mr. Bert Tubus of Mason, who have been the guests of Jas. Van Horn's famly, returned home Saturday. GREGORY. From our Correspondent. Mss Jenne Braley spent Saturday and Sunday n South Lyon. U. D. Gater of Chelsea, s home helpng hs father n the harvest feld. Mrs. Daley, wfe of Rev. S. Daley, s spendng a few days wth frends n ths vcnty. * Mss May Frazer of North Lake, spent the Sabbath under the parental roof n ths place. A. J. Chlson was n town Monday and Tuesday lookng at the prospects of a mll at ths place. Wll Farrngton and wfe of Detrot, are spendng a few days wth frends and relatyes n ths place. R. W. Caskey s renovatng hs en* gne preparatory for the fall threshng. He ntends to commence n a few days. W. WWard's prospects of an appontment n Washngton are somewhat dampened by trouble wth the v mals. A New York lawyer propounded a hypothetcal queston of 872 words. Mss Id, M. Van EtNm Ins founded and organzed a Workn^wnnmn'g ^<)_ c<'ty n New York, t\w object of whch s to keep up the prce- of women's wa^es, to protect the women and chldren n shops, and look after the nterests of the workers generally. The membershp fees are 2.j cent.*:.a*month, and members, when they are too ll to work, are p.-ud o a week out of the fund accumulated hv the fees. The Brtsh Consul at Nnjrpo calls the attenton of Brtsh manufacturers to spnnng machnes used n hs dstrct that wore mported from Japan, and whch le thnks wll eventually bo adopted n cotton-producng countres. The advantages clamed for them as compared wth the method of spnnng used n Amerca are that the staple s less njured, and that the seeds are better cleaned. Ths s attaned by drawng the cotton between straght steel edges of knves, nstead of usng saws. The Salvaton Army are havng great success n Inda accordng to all reports. Tn 1 }' are sad to lve on 20 eentsawtek per capta, and submt to great prvatons uncomplanngly, and t s also sad t^t Commssoner Tucker ther leader, recently resgned a government place worth $4,01)0 a year to jon the arm}'. The frst decson of the status of a lfe nsurance polcy, where the wfe, for whose henelt t was taken out, ded before the husband, has just been mr?de by Judge Seddon n St. Lous. He holds that where a man tusnres hs lfe for the beneft of hs wfe and thee Burvves her. the polcy wll nure to the beneft of the chldren, ndependently of the nsured's credtors. A sow and pgs at Dubln, Ga., btten by the mad dog reported some weeks ago, has snce ded. Twelve pgs were put up n a pel? nome tme ago, and the other mornng one of them was found to be mad, and had btten every hog n the pen. It was taken out of the pen and closely watched to see what t would do. It soon attacked other hogs, and, came near btng a horse on the leg. It would attack everythng n ts reach. It contnued ts frantc motons about one hour, when t was klled. There s consderable exctement at Granvlle, Ga., over a group of sprngs that have been lately opened up wthn 4tb? yards of the depot n that place. S. E. Mathews s vstng hs parents The water of one of these sprngs s hghly mpregnated wth ron, one and other frends n Hastngs ths wth sulphur and one wth alum. Near week. N. T. McCleer attends to hs by s one sprng runnng out from busness durng hs absence. under a large ron rock. The water of. ths one s clear and cool. Then about Hosea Wetherbee, who fell from a j 100 yards further down are two other cherry tree a whle ago s not dong as sprngs gushng out from under a steep well as expected. It was found that**"!!. The water of these two s nearly bones were fractured n the shoulder.,a#cold as ce and clear ascry st.l. DK0NT»"."" T POLISH IS THE BEST. GE NTS WANTED *4' U L LOCAL OR TRAVELING. f*v, ^" "* Llu»ral I'ay. [Vrm»n<»nt work. S$" QUICK SELLING SPECIALTIES crocs w-a.saxa./.asr'rs rx Elegant Outft FREE. Experence not requred. Complete nstructons to 'lf-urc success. JAB. E WIIITNKY, NufPrynan, Rochester, X, Y. D. u I -LYJL EEBY, General Blacksmth. Shop owned by Danel Rchards and formerly occuped by Ed. Parker, on Mll street. PSSCCKSEY, MUSK. FIRST CLASS WORK GUARNATEED, AND PRICES REASONABLE. **&* Horse Shoeng a xcursons HALF RATES FOR The ROUND TRIP. Va MUnourJ Paclflr Ralway an J ron Mountan Routo.tr>ft] pont* n Arkftnnaa. TVxtw, Kanus and Nebraska. A«u*t ftl md 2tth, Scptpmbf Kth and 24th, and Ortobor *fl. Thrty duy* lmt, top-ovor prvloffw), rhesplandft. CnnM > f»»r]y tor Ant choce For descrptve land pamphlet* fw. addreaa tbe rjompany' Ag*nt or H. C. TOWNSEND Oenml Passenger Ijelw* AflUlt, St Luula/Mo. WELL, IT'S WARM AND SUMMER 0 GOODS are n demand. l>nt nevertheless I am determned to close mt to make room for my large FALL STOCK whch s on the way. so UNLOAD I WILL, AND UNLOAD I ^ ^ MUST. Come and see me and I wll do you good. Remember we have no old Goods, and our prces are always the lowest. fyjsswqjj* FRANK WRIGHT, the Clother, - - Plnckney, Mchgan. ITS NOT WOOL THAT WE WANT, But the cash n order to do busness. All owng us on account or by note wll please call and settle wthn the N K X T A.TTS,. for we roust balance our books n that tme. PURE DRUGS, MEDICINES & CHEMICALS, Specalty."^ SELECT JOILET ARTICLES AND PERFUMERY. A fne lne of Statonery and Fancy Goods, specal attenton gven to COMPOUNDING PRESCRIPTIONS accuracy and absolute purty guaranteed. A fne assortment and reasonable prces worthy your attenton and nspecton. Please call. Yours, F.A.SIGLER, - Pnckney, Mch.

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