K COO - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1916-08-03.pdffiS^lfcBtfrr^? *»....
Transcript of K COO - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1916-08-03.pdffiS^lfcBtfrr^? *»....
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I » ;. XXXIV r y "! O.^ev, L.' : 1.^1 Cr >..' .'.'i, T h i n s d a y , Ai ' j ' J l r : No. 26
FINE ENTERTAINMEHSJ ANNUAL PfCNIC | WHISKEY ON G
GAS DRIVEN '."(ivtri ".t the. f : ro k n t y C h a u -fttL:cjiJ^. E v c F y o n e ^ . ' t i a s t d
AJthcoj:!:- the ^ii'vuio t t i t ici.ng- \.\iv Chixuii,i^\-a hh'.t t t ? . : ve:y high: JOO-r-ideroog tr.f c^fcdity cf the tottou-.1 1-luentn, o/ ajh &*.::**scti0.1 h t s been a -pveHtsed ). v those who buve t i t ended. The fijbt ourobtr on the yrc^t&rr., the Gluuchki.o Orchestra , gfcve enter ta inments Mc:.dt.y <.fttrr.c^n t.od t'vt Vng, Too much cr.nr.ct be f t id in prti.se oi Mr. GiJUE-oi.:r: tod t-ht bi.r.d c f t r t i s t s v :th his/.. Their rr.us:-: wte cf the fi-.i-(••si pot ' . t . /e o.i-ture, .-. f the boit t ha t
O f t h e rOofi^i h i a m b u r g S ^ n c' i iy S t . h c j t j : ci R L S H L a k e
RAIN MO
one oe he<.H
:rtd -.,1 i jjirtf oioy; to, • ^tt ide •: f the 'i: ^e or.c ;*e.-:
r i tu. 'B.
Tuettjiiv iftt-rr.ee-::, Mist: 'JaJiste -77.-:-"•nt entt r-tained w:th piar .ok^ces unci novelty to ".£? consisting cf ,ha£f;c I 'M! popular r urr.bere, which [;,:ve n, jch pleasure c.r.:i delight to h t r .'JMt'ncB. c h e was £.:ccrr:ir&rie;l ry a render, Mi B Lfc ' ira ririntrja)], who £;:ve ' w o very p.Ui?J".g ?e:tctione, " M t : r : n F. . : -t':rfly " io:J "Prur.t-!la.
Tuesday evtr. io^, Mr. Ht ' . ry Z'.vik fc;ive hit f i . r o : ? lecture, '"Pity P a l i " ", hicb be bo ce.overes too "S a:'"-, i".ci srr.L 'hrcup;ho'Jt the TTc:t* 'pp.
;:rd whi: r,- never fails to i . e ^ e :.1. .'>r-t' who care i..r sorr.t tbirq; "'.vcrth wv A .
W e ( | ' t R : i y afternoon, .-.'.! - : v n i ' ^ , Chato Fr^'.k ar,d the Maryian 1 -' -:^e;f f^ave a A. i^htful j . ro^ram, <~i ~±!&:'•• r,n ol't'inginjr, readings and r a n p T.laying which f ave much ple&fjre DP w«)ll ae satisfaction to the listeners.
Altboagh the Cbautau.iua W M i ( t a howling ecccese hnar.ciajly, the orN'r-tainmtmtB wt re of the higbeet ijaaiity sr.d Homotbirig tha t tven a r ' ty a ig l , ! bt. proud t.o have.
Thomas Birkett Th(jfnaE P i r k e t t cf Dexter, one of
tbi« itiont p;cn:intn,t chfer&ctcrB in the dovt'loprr.ent of Waehlenfiw county and for y ra rs a FuccesEfui t.u^ine^B man, diod I 'ndLy r igh t . He was >••'' years of
Mr. Bi: l :et t vvae bcrn in Cumbe/ ILTKI,
Ungltt:d, January Oth, >33 , F/:1 n.r.-.e to An. tr ica in ">"2. Heiw,as a -r..;iler by ^,2adt and .'n l^"1: wr.^ er."olc>t(i in t.hat ca^r.:!*y ty D. D. 'S-otn & ",'o , whone (ffr.-es were lor&tt^- in Kcwell In .186.1 r.e founded the De f t e r Savings Hank, *<*-7v:-g ae ite pre t i:lt -1 : p to the
ime c -•( -JE wtatit. oi-gh-
A n n M.J Birket t is ejrvived cy < "€ .1
••(.1-; Mrs. E k a r o r J. NewKirk cf Avbor.
The f c e r a l nxsvte.'d :-, Dexter Mo:1
d;xy afttrr .con a: two o'cicck.
The B Sharp Club Yhc B Sharp Club held i t ' s J j l y r^ee t
;;tg at, the heme of Mr?. W s . Gardner in West Pr . tnam. The rr.eett-g wao -tailed at ;•;.") and despite the . ' t e - p e boat the Mendelsohn program with Mrs. F . £ w a r t h c u t as leader wae <:n-joVtd ty all. A lawn lur.cheon w-ae sowed a.-d a f t t r the social hour t.he olub adjourned to meet at the horce of Miaa Harr is , with Mira Mart in in t h a r g e of the program.
HIT AND MIS—MOSTLY HIT
Th« booze fighter kills himself v it.h rvim-durc shote
"I do not drink, it dimn my batting eye."—Ty Cobb.
Whi*key doea not give s t rength , but A feeUng of s t rength .
The liQUor dealers are as wlac as serpents and as harmlefln
The Uquor trafBC approaches BO-inanity on it* weakeat side.
Man tfi the only animal tha t has not sense enough to leave alcohol alone.
Tear down a brewery and upon its ruin* will r lM * factory —John M i t e * ell.
Liquor ahonld he said only to coa-f^tiMd «rankar4e. They are wortbJeea
P E N A L T Y FOR C A U S I N G D C A T H
OF A P E D E f . 8 T R I A N WT11CH
D E T R O I T M A N P A Y b .
j The North hiu.iuburg Sunday S:bt.>oi will hold d.B anriLial pi.•:::'-.• t-i Kjsh Lt.ke i
1 Saturday, Augus t Lib. \ t-nicken pie! (.linntsi will be tie: \ e-d al ttoc-n. Tboe t -who have at tended :htne gather ingu in
the- paet will i t - r o e r . b e n h t t the l aoee ^ I N S T R U C T I V E 8 T A T E W E W T of Nor th H a m b u r g ore onexceiled when , it cornes to diHb'og up g.-od things to eat . A h u n t i n g -: o:-o:ttte has been appo'nU'd to look t f t e r tr.e ^pc-rtf, v/rnch will 'O'l^i^: of war and m a HtuntH. Mr. .Vh • i-HJCJ of the J -jy J oe oi'rarr ana [-. : on th<" p-rou'.a^. help to rr.iukt t 'd\ '.-its over h^id n
of a ba'1 game1, tug v cth-e- -ntereeting :h wi.'l sp*tk en ihe r ••: a ::ry s t andpo in t . .--.a^e w..l be served
He Places the Blame On the Fact
That He Had Boen Drinking and
the Judge Give* Warning to
Others. .
md .•- v k r". one : o.nt >: ' e t f the host r-io-\ o r t h H B T . burg.
Glenn F&rm 81 Years
in Famify. Sold j - : > (i A . G len - - ? *
i }< • 'i: in. v or . : of ^'l' Vi'ooG' :1
' • ' - ; - y e i - >• a
, -acre Praser
Ave. of Dctrc. t . Ir. • r< ^ *• •• r ^ ^ . aut mc-
fi;1"1 ' FVH «•''' ' . a h e the fa ' - ; : his
:o ni ! i . m ha.- be 1 he out:no' on oi the -7 . - ' n
;.-. .. , - r v 'T 1-..-, 0 . * t ( t i g n ;, . ;• -,
e' ' ' or "ihib i -\
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t - John o, t ...... i l-D.:'t: I:P;:eri i.nl A'iurew Jackscn . John
. Glenn derded the prcoerty to Robert o'. , Gleor\ v\ho a iew years ago t ransfer red
it to bin FV>O, F red A. Glenn. This ie the UiHt pie"e ci property on the North Pake road that has remained continu-ounly in the- G k mn iamily ^ince it was tak«n up <>y tne government . This tamiry w e i r the pioneers in tha t p a r t of Dexter township, and they caused to
I be erected the M. K. Church n«ar th« I home, and tne fir'-t school house in tha t
section.-- Gbeleea Standard.
Card of Thanks I wwh to e.\p/eps :T,y B m ^ r e thanks
to my kind tnev-d? a"'l neighbors, for the many ui \.b ,d klndcefes and Eympa-tby during ' he f;:kr:es-g a.o.l death of my boioved w G ; Rev. -.'arr.burn for nis uordf o' " .> r ' c r t . the choir Icr their ito.oiK, and "'.e neighbors an'; i fiends for 'ho oeawtiftil flowers.
\V. H. Eland ,-ni the ^roith f a ^ i ' v .
"No in an with even the tmiell of lliiuor oa hih breath should be permitted to drive an automobile. I believe my warning should be heeded, by all automobilistH. Hod I followed the rule I would not be KOIIIK to Jack-won prison to aervti from three to Vc year«. ' *
WilJiain Do r ah , ' convicted of ruatw slaughter a« a result ol' ruimlug down and killing Wllllum ('. Nutter, Jr., with his automobile the nlicht. of Jan. 37, Kraaped the liars in his cell lu the county jail and with a trace or t remor in Ills voice1 mad* the foregoing Ocuarfttion, s^y^ rbe l>»».rolt NewK,
"1 was not intoxicated the night of tht accident 1 had been drinking, that 1 admit . Bui my condition was not such Ihut I was driving blindly or reokleufdy. Hi 111, when I was urresf-eri tiiere waa thu) odor ol1 liquor on my hie^th aijd they aald 1 v/a« drunk.
"Had It not been for that I would be a fr«e man tocUiy, The tentlmony that 1 gave and the testimony ot my wltcesnee 'would have stood before the jury aati I would have been liberated. But the fact I had a drluk applied my rulu. I had to admit 1 ha«l feeen dr inking aud the jury evi dently took the position that having bad « few drink* I was drunk. Again 1 repeat that no man has any right— or regard for his own welfare to drlafc arwl dr ive an automoblh, at the *ame t ime."
Dorah wa* called before Judge Connolly i(i t/he recoider ' s court for sen tence. He was the hrHt man ever convicted in the criminal courts of tub oit) on a charge of manslaughter ai; the OLHarovvth ol ».n autoniohlU ncci-
"1 give you this sentence," remark (-d ihe court, "ma » warning to auto cliivers who ^et drunk and believe ihej ovn the streols and who have DO regard for human llio."
DYING A NATURAL DEATH
A Brewer Who Finds a Better Use
f o r Hir. Brewery.
W I L L I A M \ V . I . ? 1 .WIS
H o w e l l C a n d i d a t e (or t h e n o m
i n a l ten of R e g i s t e r oi D e e d s , on
R e p n b l i c a n t i rk or at P r i m a r i e s
A u g . 2 4 t h .
W i t h m y 20 y e a r s e x p e r i e n c e
hand l ing- t h e d e t a i l w o r k cf a
r a i l r o a d office. I feel, ful-y q u a l i
fied m e for *he office cf R e g i s t e r
of D e e d s . Y o u r v o t e i^ e a r n e s t l y
so l ic i t ed-
J. Church, Optometrist Will be nt the Finckney he**! Sat
urday, A 1*7. 12th. Examinat ion Fre«^ Eyes properly fitted. Satisfaction poaranteWl. J . J . C H U R C « .
\
There la one thing better thaa to be a good Samaritan, aad that is to eaotare the gaaf of thievee. * jfe^r t>—1« M aMny »en ioec their
joea Uireagk oVetofc ae «111 be throws « « * asjioyiMBt by
Big Poultry Show a t Fair. The lrt!5 poultry and pet stock show
a t the Michigan Rtate I 'alr wan the inrgest exh^hlt of the kind ever held in the Ktate, and It IK exi>e*red tha t the 18lf» show will Also be n re tard breaker. t Jeneml Almiaper UlelGnsrtii Kaya that Inquiries are being need red frost ff^oltrjr Mta u i l i i M la ail ffecUoM of
T h e lifjuor husiness is dying a natural death. The HO called small brewers have been given their tleahh certificates and the profits fo be guiuecl in th« his breweries are so small tha t they are not good investments .
This la a h ta tcment ma^le by Frederick Wolf, Philadelphia brewer, quoted in the North American. Mr. Wolr permitted his brewery ileense to lapse and explained why be did so. Ho said:
"1 am quit t ing business and will tu rn my brewery into a factory. The re is ne money In the brewery buwlness, and it is ge t t ing worse every ywu\ The cost of labor and material Is rls ing, and on t h e other hand many a r c cnt.ting out beer and liquors. T h e r e 1s but. one a l te rna t ive and t h a t i-s to quit the buainoss.
"If anybody t akes the trouble to examine the records of the Internal revenue depar tment , he will find tha t the liquor business is receiving some hard smashes . There is less consumed each year aad month. Tha t means that tfee smal l brewers must eult , and the little business left will be doae by the large concerns. They a re in a posHkm to fight for life, because tbelr eapfcai will permit them to help the retaMe**. The lat ter are also 0 > i t e banliiens and must he helped It bay their license*. The brewers must go to the i r aid."
In one week, according to the North American, 20 liquor licenses were allowed to lapse in Philadelphia, In the list were seven retail, ten wholesale, or,* bottling aad two brewing U-
li
'A
Large Stock of Dry Goods Shoes and Furniture
To Be CBosed Out All Future Orders Canceled
Nothing Reserved
Shoes Shoes All Shoes are advancing in Price Our Prices are reduced
Th:*s week we offer our Merf^. Misses and Chi Wrens' Oxfords at Whole-K-aie prices.
Grocery Specia/s Saturday Best Tea, 45c 3 lbs Best Rice, 25
f
oe we Ooffee 27c BestRai^ns, 10c 35c Bl'ie Label Coffee, 30c 9 bars Lenox Soap, ^5e
ugusi 4th A Representative of cue of Chicago's Largest Tailoring Outfiting Co. will be at our store to take measures for Fall and Winter Suits. Large line of Mtuples to -elect from. Prices lowest, a tit guaranteed.
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v> n i ; •A b( :i v ";'.-. >:w f4^
. .See Cold Drinks. . . ;I.K! :1^1-::::.1^, rc f re-hi r^ S c d a s and S u n -
Velvet Br . i r . l k e CreTim r^cd exclusively, .vith t^e best f l a - o r s ^ p b t n ^ ^ h - e .
V e r n o r ' s Ginger ,\1e served as it
should be.
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Pinckney, Mich*
ftey ywwy an wtfruvMOja uur I
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH •to
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ONE BEA r s ai\d 5hrob
jeifTare ai\d Cultivatioxv
Fine Old Trees That Add Beauty to the Homes in the South.
PLAN FOR BEAUTY IN GROUNDS
By L. M. BENNINGTON.
The beauty which Is near at hand Is Bften neglected while we prize that which is denied us—we refer to the beauty and desirability of the Celas-trus, or bitter sweet vine. This native climber, found In our woods and along our fences, is one of the most satisfactory vines that can be grown about the home.
It is as hardy as granite, a quick grower, twining securely about Its support and it Is not liable to disease. In the fall, when flowers are scarce, it covers Itself with clusters of orange-colored fruit, which the frost opens, revealing its crimson seeds.
Choose a dark, rainy day, If possible, for the transplanting, otherwise do this work at sunset—we mean In transplanting seedlings.- Water the seed bed thoroughly a short time before you begin to transplant, then lift the plants, with all the soil their roots hold, and remove to the permanent bed.
Keep the seedlings covered with a wet cloth, so that the heat and wind will not dry them! With a sharp-pointed stick make the hole for the plant and then fill it with water. Plant the seedling in this puddle, drawing the dark soil about the stalk when the ground has been firmed about the plant as much as possible,
A miniature water garden is practical and will prove most Interesting, needing less attention than a flower bed its size. Have a sugar or vinegar barrel cut In two, or use a wooden tub. Sink this in the soil. Make a potting box about twelve inches square and fill with rich mud from a pond, or use half rich loam, adding to the mud or loam about one-third of well-rotted manure.
Plant the nymphae-root In this and place in the tub ; fill with water until i t is two or three Inches deep over the r o o t
When the growth commences and ;fhe leaves appear, water may be added from time to time until the tub is full. Never change the water, simply replace that which evaporates.
SOME NOTES IN SEASON
Make a note of the yellow spots on the lawn. If the grass is scanty, the trouble is probably sand or poor soiL T h e best cure is to dig out the place, and put in some good loam.
Prune flowering shrubs as soon as .they have finished flowering. The secret of pruning shrubbery, In a nut
shell, Is to study the habit of growth of each plant, and to strive to encourage i t ; not alter it to your views.
Then resod the place. If the grass is there, but dead, the trouble is lack of moisture.
If the grass on the lawn is growing fast, two mowings a week, allowing the clippings to lie where they fall, is easier than one mowing in ten days or two weeks, followed by a raking to remove the cut grass.
Gravel roads and walks that refuse to get solid can be greatly Improved by the Judicious use of clay. Pulverize the latter, and sprinkle evenly. Too much clay will make a sticky road in wet weather, which is far worse than a soft gravel road.
To insure a thick privet hedge, cut back three inches every time the plants make six inches of growth.
Kvergreens from the nursery can be safely transplanted by the end of July. It is lmpwilttiH to keep the roots moist, with as much soil adhering as possible.
Always keep on the lookout for possible mosquito-breeding places, rain barrels upturned cans, low places In roof gutters, and liqurid manure tubs. Drain off and apply kerosene,
Make notes this year to guide you In next year's planting plans. If you see a shrub or flower that you admire, find out the name and variety if possible.
Replace wooden floors and posts with concrete, and the work Is done for all time.
Keep all the fence corners cleaned out. More vermin are harbored there than anywhere else on the place.
By ordering the various Dutch bulbs —hyacinths, tulips, crocuses, narcissus, daffodils—early, and by enabling your nurseryman to book his order, you can usually get better prices and quality.
Pinch off the seed pods from azaleas and rhododendrons to insure good flower buds next year.
Give Japanese iris plenty of water to Insure good blooms.
For late flowers of gladiolus plant bulbs not later than July 10. Put In some tuberoses also.
Flowers that are not making satisfactory growth may be stimulated into activity by liquid manure.
Plant a few pots of oxalls and free-sins for early flowers next fall.
When watering do It thoroughly. One thorough watering a week is of much more benefit to the plants than a little sprinkle every day. Sprinkling tends to form surface roots, so that the plants suffer more quickly from drought than of deep-rooted.—F. H. S.
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BEST IN NECKWEAR LATEST ACCESSORIES UPON
WHICH COSTUME DEPENDS,
Collar and Face for Which It Is Choaen Must Be Harmonious for Perfect
Effect—Two Dainty Neckwear Suggestions.
Skill in selecting accessories is often the major asset of a woman who ranks us the best-Uressed Individual iu her own set.
Gloves, shoes, hat and neck dressing must be thought out carefully and the question of furs is one that comes up for consideration. The summer fur vogue is stronger than it was a year ago, when It first received general American recognition.
Last year natural unimul scarfs pretty well dominated the summer fur showing; but this season innumerable smart novelties are displayed. Stole scarfs lined with thin satin or chiffon, little three-cornered wraps of flat fur, collarettes and all sorts of clever little capes are shown.
In regard to summer neckwear, it must be noted that many periods contribute, and a collar taken from the era of Henry II, Byron, Oliver Cromwell or Victoria may be equally smart, provided the collar and the face for which it is chosen as a framing blend harmoniously. Cape and nchu effects are extremely good and sailor, cavalier and Eton shapes are also favored. Some tailored collars of pique or linen have organdie cape collar, capes of net, batiste, etc., are thought highly of and are worn witB frocks of silk, voile and other sheer summer fabrics. Cromwell collars or organdie daintily embroidered are youthful and smart.
Fichu collars show best when made of some very soft, thin fabric, such as georgette crepe, crepe de chine, mous-sellne de sole or chiffon, and collars suggesting the Henry II period are made of thin material and are boned to keep them erect and In shape.
The question of collars and many other accessories of dress Is limited only by the inclination of the individual to set brain and fingers to work on
the development of novelties, for actual cost enters in a very small degree into the matter. Odds and ends of lace or other leftover dress trimming or fabrics may with excellent results be pressed into service.
Two suggestions are offered in the sketch shown herewith. The upper picture gives a collar and cufl" set, employing black satin and white organdie, with small white pearl buttons as the finishing touch, and the lower sketch
Dainty Accessories That May Be Made a t Home.
shows a simple round collar of rose-colored georgette crepe, caught with a bow of French blue velvet ribbon.
The question of veils Is also an important one when selecting the summer accessories of dress. Many net and lace veils as well as the more serviceable chiffon ones, are fashionable, and there is a considerable color range to choose from. The wise woman will try the effect of the different colors on her own complexion before choosing.
DAINTINESS AWAY FROH HOT1E Its Achievement Never an Easy Mat-
ter, and Calls for Much Time and Attention.
Daintiness has ever been the most al-iurlng of feminine attributes, but attaining It Is no small trouble. To be truly dainty a woman must spend time and money attending to the little items of her toilette that give her the right to the adjective. To achieve daintiness while traveling is an art.
Several bottles should be Included In the traveling bag or case. One should
CHARMING EVENING GOWN
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contain alcohol to cleanse the skin with. Pure alcohol may or may not agree with a tender akin, so that if It is diluted with half rain water and hall alcohol no possible Irritation can resul t This liquid, when dabbed gently over the skin with pads of absorbent cotton while traveling will remove the dust and prevent It from getting embedded in the skin.
Benzoin is another necessary of the traveler's k i t This also is to be patted into the skin, and may be poured, a few drops at a time, Into the wash basin of the train dressing room to soften the water. The odor of tincture of benzoin is delightfully aromatic and a dash of toilet water afterward makes the skin as fresh as a rose.
Good cold cream of course is not overlooked in the l is t only It is taken so much for granted that the other articles mentioned above are to be looked on as its successors. The cream should be rubbed into the skin when milady starts out on her journey, after the pores of the skin have been cleansed and opened. Then follows the benzoin and toilet water t reatment
The last requisite is a bottle of pungent smelling salts for probable train sickness. Everyone knows the nauseating sensation after an hour or two on the train. If smelling salts are at hand, the knowledge of their presence Is reassuring.
A very dainty and charming avaning gown 1« this cm mi whlta ttilia. Its simplicity adds a tone of richneas and "quality* to ft which ornament*, tien would fail to d c The skirt falls In simple line* la the front hut ia
Just a trMa la the ia
Bright Silver and Tulle. What in the world did fashion do be
fore someone thought of silver ribbon and tissue for gaslight wear? An en* chanting dance frock just completed ia made of white tulle and silver ribbons —nothing else, if one excepts a simple foundation slip of silver tissue which gleams delicately through tho floating skirt of tulle. There are in fact three skirts of tulle, and on the second one is a wide silver ribbon, set at the knee. The girdle is of similar sliver ribbon run across the chiffon underbodlces, below the drapery of tulle. At the front of the skirt, about eight inches below the waistline. Is set a tab of stiver ribbon fastened to the tulle with rosettes of narrower silver ribbon, and from the girdle depend four tabs of ribbon likewise trimmed with silvery rosettes. Can you imagine the sparkle and drifting whiteness of this lovely frock On • ballroom floor*
To Press a Platted Skirt * When pressing a plaited skirt after
you nave laid the skirt on the ironing board fold the plaits evenly and pin then to the ironing blanket at the bottom. Bold the waistband firmly with the left band, and iroa from the bottom toward the top. Bold fba r*fi*t
iOfhfly asypsiumiL
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Sv/flr- f. .'^fS 1 A » • • •
Digestive Troubles
cause headache, biliousness, constipation, impure blood and other unpleasant symptoms. If these troubles are neglected they weaken the body and open the way for seriousillness.Manychronic diseases may be traced bade to indigestion that could have been immediately
relieved by Beecham's Pills. This wefl» known home remedy has proven itself dependable, safe and speedy during sixty years' use. The fame of having a larger sale than any other medicine in the world proves the dependable, remedial value of
ftEKMIS I) PUIS MEN AND 52¾¾¾.¾
W O M R N couraaes and lessens TV V W l C s r i a m b i tT o n . beauty, vis
or and cheerfulness often disappear when the kidneys are out of order or diseased. For food results use Dr. Klhner'a Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy. At drusaists. Sample slaa bottle by Par* eel Post, also pamphlet
Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Btafhamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents. Whan wrtt» tog mention this paper.
Johnny's Manners. Where the carefully trained child
learns bad manners is a standing mystery to Its watchful parents. These anxious rearers of the young are often heard propounding the query, but generally without result. Once In a while, however, out of the deep silence comes an illuminating answer.
Johnny furnished one Just the other day. He had just finished a particularly toothsome dish of apple padding, which he ate to the last morsel. Then, despite the fact that there was company at the table, he deliberately clean.
"Johnny I" exclaimed his mother, after a horrified gasp, "whom did you ever see do a thing like that?"
"Dogs," replied Johnny.—Life,
Acommodated Him. The old man looked across the table
at his daughter. "That young man Smiley called on me today, Maria. I believe you sent him."
"Yes, papa*" I'Df course, I questioned him con
cerning his prospects, and found him to be a decidedly frank young man. He said that all he needed was a start In life."
"What did you do, papa?" The old man smiled grimly, and
glanced down at his heavy boots, "I gave him what he needed," he said.
Why Travel? to the seashore "Going to the seashore this sum
mer?" "What's the use? A breezy day on
Broadway is Just AS Interesting.**
Tea and Coffee For Children?
These beverages contain drug elements that hinder development of both body and mind, especially in
Nowadays, for their children, wise parents choose t
POSTUM TJhis delicious table bev
erage, nrade of cereals, has a wonderfully satisfying flavor—a flavor much Eke the higher grades of coffee (but without any of coffee's harm.) Postnm is a, true, pure food-drink that has helped thousands ID forget the coffee habit
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* * * •
GRASSHOPPERS ARE A DESTRUCTIVE PEST
Combination of Three Small Hopperdoxers Attached to Wheels in Manner to Be Pushed Instead of Pulled by Horse*.
(Prepared by the United Stntes Department of Agriculture.)
Over a large portion of the country west of the Mississippi where the annual rainfall is leas than 25 inches, .grasshoppers are among the worst pests which the farmer has to combat, In Farmers' Bulletin 091, United States department of agriculture, two practical measures of control are suggested: (1) the destruction of the eggs, and (2) the killing of the Insects by means of poisoned bait
The eggs are laid shortly before the coming of freezing weather, the adult Insects selecting for this purpose, when available, firm soil in well drained locations. Abandoned fields, undisturbed strips under fences and along neglected roadsides, the banks of irrigation ditches and buffalo R<M1 along the edges of Infected fields are favorite places. The eggs hatch about the time of the last 6pring frosts, and the young grasshoppers then push upward to the surface In order to feed upon the nearest vege-
land should be left rough to expose as many eggs as possible, and after hard freezing weather it shouid be harrowed to expose any eggs that may have been covered before.
If these precautions are not adopted and the grasshoppers are allowed to hatch from the eggs they may be controlled later in the season by the use of the following poisoned bait:
Bran 86 pounas, white arsenic or parts green, 1 pound, oranges or lemons 6 pounds, cheap sirup of molasses 2 quarts, water 3 gallons.
White arsenic is preferred, owing to its cost, which is must less than paris green at the present time.
The dry bran and poison should be mixed in a washtub. The sirup and the Juice and finely chopped pulp and peel of the fruit should then be added to the water and poured over the mixture of bran and poison. This, mash is very attractive to grasshoppers while it is fresh, but when dry or stale it is nf little value. The early morning is thp best time to scatter it over the in-
8owlng Poisoned Bran Bait From a Buggy in Treating Meadows to Destroy Grasshopers in New Hampshire.
tfltion. If the land is plowed to a depth of at h'Hst six inches early in the year, the e^gs will be covered so deeply that the young cannot emerge after they have been batched. It Is desirable that this plowing should "be finished as much before April 15 as possible.
Where the crop to be grown on the land does not require plowing, the eggs may be destroyed with little expense by stirring the ground to a depth of about two inches before March L This breaks and crushes many of the cylindrical capsules in which the eggs are cemented firmly together. Osiers are destroyed by exposure to the weather or from the attacks of natural enemies. In clean, soft ground a heavy harrow will stir the ground sufficiently to destroy the eggs. In heavy soils, Weedy fields, alfalfa, or land In which patches of sod occur, the disk harrow Is required. In treating alfalfa In this way care should bestakeo not
' t o set the harrow deep enough to cut off the crowns of the plants. The
Encourage Young Plants. Toung strawberry plants should have*
as long a season as possible to grow Cram the start op to the time of ees-
?£ r flssVon of growth, Therefore the* ear-^ ^ ^ ¢ 9 ^ runners are encouraged to root '- ^ fifty should not be removed.
&* •
Good Preparatory Crepe, Leguminous crops, such as the
clovers and alfalfa, make good preparatory crops for the vegetable gardes where barnyard manure Is hard to gu t They leave-aUrogen Is the soil as well as humus.
fested land, as the grasshoppers are just beginning to feed then and the mash does not dry out as quickly as if It were applied later In the day. After the first day little of the bait is eaten, so that several applications may be necessary in badly Infested fields. The formula mentioned will provide a sufficient quantity for 5 acres of heavily Infested land and should cost about 25 cents per acre for one application. If the Infestation is not very heavy, the amount should be enough to treat 10 acres,
If the poisoned bait Is scattered evenly, domestic animals and birds will not eat enough of it to harm them. The bait however, should never be placed In heaps or scattered thickly about, and care should be taken to keep the poison out of the reach of children and domestic animals. It is best not to use the hands for mixing as the poison may be absorbed, although there are no known instances in which poisoning has followed the sowing of the wet bait barehanded.
| Thinning for Best Crop. Don't allow the prospects of a heavy
fruit crop to tempt you into leaving more.fruit on the trees than they can properly sustain. By thinning it out the quantity win be greater and the quality much better than where it is crowded, and the danger from insects is also diminished.
« * * , : ?
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Worfc in Cherry Orchard. - The first three years after the setting of the cherry orchard the trees should be kept sprayed, pruned annually, and cultivated the first half ef
Plowing an Orchard. As a rale, orchards should not he
at trout s i s
Induce Chicks to Exercise, Chicks must he Induced to exercise.
Cover the floor with a thin layer of chaff or fine Utter and feed the cracked grain In the Utter.
Planting Hay Crops. Hay crops should be planted so
there will be plenty ef roughage for the animals eves should the summer he dry.
Removing Limbs Do not remove targe
trait trees when the as** be had by removing small
limbs i results can
1 1 M proper preparation for an apple Is deep, rich, atetlow soil tea*
MAKING UP LUNCH BASKlfJ
jAppetixfng Picnic Meat Just as Easy to Prepare a* One That in Apt
to Become "Messy."
The holiday season rm-uns the picnic Season, weather permitting, and the lunch basket stands out prominently in successful picnic preparations. A well-prepared, carefully packed lunch means contented picnickers, but there fs nothing more disappointing than to open the lunch basket and find everything crushed and "rnessy." With a little care to preparation, however, this need not happen. There are tinny little ways of putting things up that will carry them In appetizing form. For Instance a cake and pie combined may be made by lining pasty puus with pie crust and then filling theiu with a cake batter and baking them. They are much less apt to crush In the packing than the ordinary little cupcakes, and children love them.
Or a loaf cake may be baked In a tin cracker box. If this Is doDe do not take it from the box. Just Ice It and put on the cover and it will arrive in perfect condition.
Cream cakes are easily packed. A Jar of cream filling can be carried or one of creamed chicken If there is any way to heat It. The puffs filled with this will be great favorites.
Iced tea can be made of cold water as well as of hot. Slmp*ly measure the tea into an earthen dish, pour over it the cold water, cover, and let stand for an hour. One never gets the slightest bitter tnste in tea made this way. The lemon juice mixed with the sugar may be carried in a bottle.
There is no need of taking dishes that have to be washed and carried home again. With paper napkins and cardboard boxes, one can improvise a very good picnic table with strong envelopes rolled for cups ; or there can be had from n store, for a very small outlay, a package of paper or fiber plates, cups, napkins and spoons, that can be thrown away when they have been used. They ore lighter and less bulky to carry than the home table ware.
It is a good plan, especially if there are children in the party to take II the basket a tiny "first-aid" package, containing a roll of bandage, some absorbent cotton, a strip of adhesive plaster, a tube of antiseptic ointment and any other little first-aid necessity. Though this may not seem a festive prepnration, it is often very welcome as minor accidents, really not more than mishaps, have a way of happening at picnics.
Housewife's Lore. It is harmful to silk stockings to
iron them. Bread, cheese and fruit make a per
fect lunch. Cream puffs take 25 minutes to
bake. Half a pepper, minced fine, will
flavor an omelet. Apples> bananas and lettuce are a
delicious salad mixture. Don't forget that split peas make
an excellent luncheon soup. Crab flake cocktail 13 very prettj
served in green pepper cups. Muffin and enke hatters require half
as much liquid as flour. To prepare horseradish quickly, put
Jt through the meat chopper. For clams baked in shells it is best
to use the large "hard" clams.
Orange-Mint 8alad. Pulp of four oranges, two tablespoon
fuls sugar, two tablespoonfuls finely chopped mint, two tablespoonfuls olive oil, two tablespoonfuls lemon Juice, salt and cayenne pepper. Peel the oranges, remove the seedf and white connecting tissue, and divide the pulp into
1 convenient sized pieces; add the sugar, \ also the mint, very finely chopped, sea-
eon, marinate with a French dressing made from the olive oil and lemon Juice, and serve on crisp lettuce leaves.—Pictorial Review.
Pork Tenderloins In Chafing Dish. Remove the small rounds of meat
from the under part of the pork ribs and place in the chafing dish, together, with a cupful of the brown gravy, a few drops of tabasco sauce, one-half cupful of tomato catsup, a pinch each of salt ami celery salt and a small piece of butter; simmer only until the meat is thoroughly heated, then place over the hot water pan. stirring In a cupful of cooked mushrooms that hnvp been cut in small pieces; serve very hot on squares of fried hominy, garnished with crisp parsley.
Children's Cookies, Beat to a cream one cupful butter
and two cupful* xujmr. Add a tea spoonful of mtlk. nutmeg or vnnltla for flavoring and flour to rolL Roil thin, cut out with ttclmal cutters. Sift granulated sugar on top and bake until a Hght brown.
Hint To iron over hooks and eyes and bat-
tons, lay a turidat towel four doubts on th« table, and lay the button*, hooka and eyes fact down, trooiag on the wfOBtmd*
« * : ' -
Hot Weather Meats
Veal Loaf, to serve cold: Cooked Corned Beef, select and appetizing. Chicken Loaf, Ham Loaf and Veal Loaf, delicately seasoned. Vienna Sausage, Genuine Deviled Ham and Wafer Suced Dried Beef for wndwichc* and dainty luncheons.
/rub/ on Libby'« at your grvctr •
70 == s=
Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago
w
A Fit. Discussing the American hotel,
which of late years has largely ceased to pay, George C. Boldt of New York said :
"Some people complain that the front of ttie house, the room clerks or greeters, are not courteous enough In American hotels.
"Be the fact as it may, the front of the house can't be too courteous, in a shore hotel a newcomer said to a greeter:
" 'I like the seventh floor back well enough, sir, but isn't the bed rather short?'
" 'Well, you see,' said the greeter, 'the people who take our seventh floor backs sire usually rather, short themselves.' "
ROLL 1 0 * BLACKS ^ f l
AT WgOLESAIi
races
ITCHING, BURNING SCALPS
Crusted With Dandruff Yield Readily to Cuticura. Trial Free.
FISHING TACKLE Complete Outfit and Tackle Box with O 3fl
choice of Bamboo or Steel Rod. only..9^6» Complete Bait Catting and Troliina
Outfit with choice of Bamboo or Steel e e - M Rod. only ifrO,**3
Send for Complete Sporting Good* Catalog. Address THE IRUNSWICK-SALKC-COLLEHOEI CO,
Dept. D. M. 623-633 Wsbstn Ave., Chlaags
DAISY FLY KILLER fi£J ^ ¾ ¾ tt
' S^,v
Cuticura Soap to cleanse the scalp of dandruff crustings and scalings, and Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heal itching and irritations. Nothing better, surer or more economical than these super-creamy emollients for hair and scalp troubles of young or old.
Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
tit. Haal, clean, er> namaatai, ooavuaeat. ch«*p. Laata all season. a»d»oi matal, can tiplllortlB oT«r; win not soil or t nj ura » n j th l a f • OoarmstMd affaotlra. AiidaaiaraortMnt • z p r o M paid f o r B1.Q0.
• A * O U > ftOMJEfct, 1M 0 « S a l * A T . . , Brooklyn, a . T.
Might Have Prevented Secession. "Yes," replied the philosophic mon
key, after the Darwinian theory had be< n considered in all its bearings; "if our ancestors had only been gifted wiih more diplomatic foresight and had bud the power to enforce their policies, the monkey tribe would to-day he the lending race iu the world."
"All," inquired another monkey; "wlmt policy do you think our ancestors should have adopted?"
"•he policy of 'once a monkey, always a monkey.' "
Conversational Diplomacy. "Who is your favorite composer?" "Wagner," replied Mr. Cumrox. "You must be a student of music!" "No. 1 mention Wagner for the sake
of relieving myself of conversational strain. If the other man doesn't like Wagner, he won't want to hear me say another word."
"And If he does?" "He'll wunt to do all the talking
himself."
Reduced. "I bought a building lot In Commu
ter Hark yesterday for nine hundred dollars."
"Why, I thought they were asking fifteen hundred dollars for those lots."
'They are; but mine was a secondhand one."
important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for inputs and children, and see that it
Bears the Signature of In Use for Oyer 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
Bad Precedent. Two Scotch soldiers who steadied
the men at a critical moment by playing mouth organs have been given medals, which does not alter the fact that the average month-organ player should be shot without the preliminary of a drumhead court-martial.
p1MMM%>
A woman seldom gets old enough to admit she's as old that that.
WMTWOTTIIY P O P H A M ' S
ASTHMA MEDICINE (HVM Prompt and Poettire Bettaf la Xrery
Case. Bold by DTOMJSU. Price 11.00. Trial Paekagabr Kail 10s.
WaUAMS Mf 8. CO, Props. Cbisfeid, 0.
Will reduce Inflamed, Strained, Swollen Tendons, Ligaments, or Muscles. Stops the lamenessand
Kin from a Splint, Side) Bone or me Spavin, No blister, so hair
gone and hone can be used. $2 a ottle at druggisti or delivered. De
scribe yo JT case for special instructions and interesting horse Book 2 M Free. AUCRBtNL JRa, the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Strained, Torn Lrga-aiania. Swollen Glaada. Veins ar Moadcvi Haalt Cata. Sorest Ulcers. Aflays pala. prtca
E.SOahon>eatdeaJenoraettv«f«d. Book "EvMentc" fret M0m,f. B. MttTiafU ttrwt,i»1sjls*a,ltos,
What costs nothing is worth nothing. W. N. U„ DETROIT, NO. 32-1916.
Bumper Grain Crops Good Markets—High Prices Prixom Awm+dBd to Yf—tmrnOanrndm io* Wimmt, Omtd, Bmrtmy,AifmifmmM*ttQi
Bo At??; i * < *
^ The winnings of Western Canada at the Soil Products Exposition s£ Denver were ersir? made. The list comprised Wheat, Oats, Barley and Grasses, the most important being the prises for Wheat and Oats and sweep stake on Alfalfa* No less important than r&esp*erjdMgaalh^ of Western Canada's wheat and other grama, is the eacceUence of the cattle fed and fattened on the grasses ef that country. A recent shipment of cattle to Chicago topped the market in that city for quality and price.
Vetfavj Casses srsfa i i fa If IS s s s l s f the Osftss Ststaa, er a*
Canada In proportion to population eafxatable surplus of wheat this 3 country in the world, and at
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C. J. SlULHF EDITOU flKQ PmiUiHI^! u^wu in I'iowell Moaday.
" • Fouia Cliciton of Detroit Vidkdd !
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seutimeiit- it's almost an obligation.
Your fanii'y and irieuds want your photograph.
D' ; C L ^ i g l w r n a d C. G . M e y f->t wi--."1
A ? J U A i b e viHItoi 'B -Snt u :01 ay .
M " S , G ^ O . R C C ii fi :';p(Jil1 :^>'V:j:;i
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!dr -inil M;H. > K. Car- were called !o Ptedforx1 F rb 'm by *o. dc-!ilb of his Ft Lit--,
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| M \ KE AN \ lM»Ol MTWP;S'T TO DA V
| Daisie B. Chapell ISfockbrd^e, Wch.
R o w e l I f a l l e n '">rt M o n t b i v ev"!ii!iL».
C l a u t l e M o u k b of F e t r o b ' s H p e u d i n j ? !do vr i f .a t iou w i t h F 1 B pR:oLi ta b e v u .
'8 ' i o h a ! HOLiboi . . of A n o V r s o u way t b e o,OH„r of ' ' • -.* ! '. ^ R e u -: '. Me\'<-i"'l ':bu s F I : H W ^ ^ :,
H a : i \ . \ i-;-n , t : ;o fn : . i ' .v n[ '_'-,.. 1 roi t WP:-(- S 'o i i i l f i , . ; ; t s : . ; i ' ' ii o r u e oi .FI i > - rM LJ N yo:
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M i l l a r d L);iri:ow a n d fctQjily of 8 0 M
Cinciual! i. Olno 'are f^uestfl nl the home of W B. Dai row,
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Q LASGOW Noted Far SelliBi Goodl BROS.
Gooils Cleaj) \ J A C K S O M , (VIJCH1GAN
8 Department \ J u s t A s You Overhaul Your Ford-
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i You Should Put Yourself In order.--
F ().:' c ! "ou 0(1 a o H <. ' L - • Oi - !
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F , E , H o y t nnH f a m i l y a n ^ R . j s p e u t t h e p a s t w-.6 ; ^ , t b r e l a t i v e s ! K F l l i o f t a n d wifp w e r e H o w e ; F h e r ( i j v i s i t o r s M o n d a v a f t e r n o o n . ' »«•• ,- - ., i
_ ' i - u s e l-JBa :> ick o : F e t r o i t w a s ! M i « 8 W v r t i e H n l l of W i i l i a n i B - | a -ues t at the iioo.e of ^T.iss Cor-j
Grand Trunk T i m e Table . ton ia visitinc hMRisler. Mrs. Ed , ( ] f . i ; a Ditikei :iie latter par; of j Oook oiid fatiiilv this week. i ia«t wp i,- i
KOL- ;iic c o n v e n i e n c e of ;K>. *tiitt , i » e o ^ e e . . .
j Claude Kennedy and Victor j Mr, aud fUr? ( lyde Uarrow and ' . Johnson of Detroit spent S u n d a y Vull Darrow Jr . of Jackson were!
Trains East Trains Ww,-| at the home of their pnreutR. j quests at the home of W, B Dar-No. ffl-8;34a.m. No. 1 7 - * 52 , . u , j M r n i i ( ] W r , fTqq_ O a v i iha ucb I row over Sunday No. 18—4:44 p. m. No. 4 7 - o ' J p m, , T -" !
'Qf J ^ k a o n Pp^ni Pundflv at t h e j K. fi. Hoyt and family of Clint- ' „._. hoi..^ of MrP. Elioabeth Clinton. j 0 n are hponclini: khc- vreek at the ;
Tnr k«i^n. K : Reriso:, home of h is paronr^, Mr. rind Mrs. \ F^it/oJi of Detroit , G. (T. IF)V' of this place '
J ' am "flrr.T'inc r,t Port^^e F R U ^ thip ! ^» r] >r,,_ n r \vw «. *: oi.r, .ino Ji i ?. j . , . i . \v lllisto n ;
FML>-. N. D. Carpenter and ^ : o ; p.ni >GF . H^nnnn F^r>.{ F ; , i n (] ) [ , , H \ p Wibiston calFd '
, i:oi-,t ;-;;:d -'.oTieh^-r. RpQpie. started ori?Ar:linr AH\n and ^vife Gf ! \ , Wpdn°P',1rlA on r> 'nnr of IOU-CT No-FI FFk- .MonFs^,-, J ' A.-il-.for.i (rihnt \vh-J has beer. 5 Ari« >[•• b J-rv-' R ^ n n n h f* ' ^,,, \;v_Vd :,A r!>. bovd oira«p, w^n"1
? Mondnr niornina frr Ar^^dia to f '! : :F,n I ' ^ u l o v momin<"
I 5
be a- ^ nrrazedai the varteiy ofslyi.es ^ Fabrics and pa-Herns that steSM- G f«it "n^enuity has cheated— ^
models panging from the jtruost & f
e tipeimte Portnm-fSithisg, single- $ buitoin coat to the most con- f servativc 3-lbutton style. E
I Mcn'sSui t s 10 to $251
i
O i l O I K : ,
•to Tf .F , , . ;ooKyi M . I . . . c, ; . . ; „ , ; . v.B.. " O - J ( ^ , ^ rTP i r v ! ,
J
Drs. Sigler & Sigler ; $ WPP
1 r JO
r'ti^" icir:::? -rv! ^-^:^(
All cfuis ,in • mf' t : y nm-
d a y or n i^ l i t . Hffire vv. : .Iai:i ^ ^
wl^rp she will ^p«nd POIT.^ F u i e t > w o : k for the Motor Co of that
PINCKiNEY -:- .MICHIGAN | i w i ; h r - - ' h t i v ' - I 'M'ife.
Very Unusual. "Then yon say you have a model bun-
band r "Quite. Since we have been married
lie has never given the neighbors a moment's anxiety."—Louisville Conrier-Journal.
M r . *nd Mrs. G A. Sigler are Yiiiting Lans ing relatives this week.
Misa Norma Ourlet t spent Satu rday and Sunday with Dexter friends.
Mra. Margaret Black and dan go ter^Ella and John Martin and family motored to Jackaon Sunday-
i - h * Mrs. N D. O^rpenter of Rrioii-- M , Mn-v- T ,- i * i i .ui.-h Mf\:\ L\ nch l e tn rned '
on and Mr. and Mra. B. F. Wid- . f,.,,,„ v , [„,„,.„ w * i i i 11ota JviL'mihz u> oaturdfty where i
istion of Detroit viqited H . "SI i,.4 uD , i, ,. „- :f,-„ . • <. , ne Uht, bevu visiting her sister, i
Wrlli*»ton and wife Mondfiv. , p^ r r , n , ^ ; ^ r «-i ,• ~«* >• ' • rJernaidme who is at tending snm-' ~ i
The Annual Pi rn icof St . Msrv 's ; uier school there. | Catholic Chnrrh will he held j Mr. mid Mw. J . S. Vaughn of | Thnraday, Aup. 17th, at. Jackson's j Detroit, Mr. and .Mrs. Emmet t ' Grove. Fur the r narticnlars uex t jKsr ry of Stockbridge, Louid! w e ^ - jMorks and family and Mrs. Min- f '
Norman Reason and family oi[1"1' Daody aud children spent ; Detroi t and Fred Grieves a n d ; ^ l 3 n K v &t the home of Alfred family of Stockbr idee WPTA Sun- j Moukb. day visitors at the home of G. W. i A number from here attended Reason Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . D. D. Smith en-
the Casselmnu show at Gregory
Fr iday evening. The same was
Odd^ :,-:d End.- \n
Corsets A t VIVJo o u r nr :cc
O d d s unci Kn(}> ]n
Shoes At a Bargain
Odds and Ends in
Ladies' Dresses and
Kimonas 75c 2 lb can Pork & Beans, strictly fresh, 10c.
New Line of
Mens Work Socks Extra Value
tertained the following Snnday: [ billed for Pinckuey Thupsday eve- j
Ed Lewis and daughters . Grace and Blanche and Mrs . A. Wallace of Wenberrille and Mr. and Mrs. to hold their performance Eugene Drake! of near Howell.
niug, but on account of the heat \ were unable to get hero in time C E- BOOTH mo?
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PINOCNEA DISPATCH
agifiiiiisiiHh^r^
LATEST North Hamburg :i.!I.J M..H ( ' M ( ' ^ rp^H ' l !
t L' •.->( i aw ty >'• .! u< lay l»v i i u
i . . - ( i.> " J 1 . u ^ p
! 1 I Another Good Cash Store Here
^aj-aiuu :>r' Mi G n i h i l
! vver^ b r o : : r . b<->re< f rom
in Neckwear
IK.-* Jvlri
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A '•l.uv ^ ii ruiay, i he
IK-*! ; u ! 'K-> NorLLi ' 7
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A Cash Discount of 10 per cent i e i'! r < I ' .',
1.
Hats, Caps, Etc V
e bV.
* -
Fresh Groceries
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Men's Work Shi>ts and Overa l l s a t Regular PH-ces 1 No War Tax added. __Top Pi»lce fop Cream, II T u e s d a y s OP PHd-ays,-
P r u i l s and Vegetables
Teeple Hardware Company West l anon
- • • • • ' • • ^ - * V - * - T - » - l - * - V + - - + - - • - - • • - » - + - . - ^ 1 - + 1 - • — • - • - • . . •
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MONKS BROS. 3
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Poul t ry and &^.^s Wanted | Paying: Cash for Poultry and Eggs
delivered at ray poultry house six days of the week and wil! pay all the market affords at all times.
^
E. PARNUM 1
11 : i | > t - ,!?. ',Vl-i-'
Classified Advertising North Lake u; t" i u.
v'uaii'nL,' ;-(-»in-
FOR SALE--Hoi*<* ard lor ^ ; t n h»r-and e lec t tnc lights for V*0 ief?r* thai asee-nsed vaiviatior:. it tuker. IOQV.
Mrs. AJdie Pot ter tor..
MONEY TO LOAN" - <>r farm security, A.ldre:^ F. M. Foteur Eianv burg, Mich
FOR R E N T - G o o d house, ,« t i t les ftoin Pinckney. Inquire of Dr. G. Pearsor.
FOR S A L E - - N e w rr.iicn COVT with calf by her side. W. 13. n a r r o w .
A r t u . i . ' '. ,m H o n . di'iJ ^anjiiv
irji! Ma*, .uc i .V -8 * -eo K i ^ r c l i e r !
of Che ib t i i vvcie N o r t l i L a k e v Lai -
t n i ' b > u a d ' i \"
lie (tnd M r s . L A. b c h u i t - of
A.:m A r b o i :UJC1 yird , K . I d e s a u d '
d a u y h l e r s of N e w Yoi 'k w e r e S u n
d a y v i s i t o r s ;it t l ie l icane of M r s
A l l y u of t h i s p l a c e .
M r . a a d Mrd O . P . I ' o a l i . .re
e n t e i t a i u i u g M r . a n d M r s . R o y
I 3 n r b e r a a d A l b e r t Y ' . b e a s k y of
of D e t r o i t t L i s w e e k .
W a n W i i ^ l i t a n d wife of C h e l -
v . a : K i v 1 :- i
at Ntv tLi Ld.ve.
M r s . S o p i u a S t u i t h nu l
d . i u g h t e i ' , N e l l i e 'na
t i v e s a t Co hoc t a b .
N o n ' a l . I O U ^ H 't.i.i l \oy ^bbliLia
s p e n t >a ta f f j : iy 'j'»aliL m B n y h t o n .
R e u be a .^aiiin.s wan in H o w e 1 !
Moud <.y.
i>
F O U N D Two small keya on -i i-a-.g.
Owner can have the 3ame by paying . 8 P a 8 p t - n t S u u d a y a t t h e h o m e of
M r . a a d M r s . W a n H u d s o n .
M i b s C a u i c o V\ ' r i i ;h t of C h e l s e a
for this Ad.
FOR SAL£--Kou3e. Barn and two Lots . S team heat, ar.d electric l ights . ; a p * ' ^ s e v e r e Every thing i" first clasf condition, ; t i ie h o a i c of Win . K u d s o a a n d good garden, and well water Terms '' w i f e suitable to purchaser . Price, assessed ; _
T ^ p u r r • Mi'N. - -i^. l i ' aa i iHrd , a o t a a n l > i s p f u t S ra :« la \ :it t h e h o m e of B.
Moro Than Enough. Toward the eud of a tlrcsouiu Joag
play an actor came on in a prlNOii scene aud bc^au [ticking at the wall-i of hl.-i cell with an li'ou bar. Tausing and v/ipiag bin brow, he Raid.
"Thid will take years." "Good uiglH," .-aid a youth la tbn
gallery .—P i tin bury h Tel egra p h.
One Phaao of Eff iciency. "And you have had the same servant
for two years?" "Yes." replied Mr. C r o ^ I o t n "ftlib
says she doesn't believe in changing *VH las t w e e k at ' a t t a r siie ha.s zvue to the trouble ot
teachin.: the f-imi'y her wny: ; . " -Washington St<ir.
Special Prices On the following for the Next Ten Days
( aio G r n a a C L a u n a r v vn.'o'.'ii 1>O*A'O.
Na.-v, Rov . i 1 bevv'.'a^, Mac i i fne
C.joidei: ( 'ah: Boo'v C a : c
I ron Bed
>l H ' l
Oi ie I I - l oo t ( ).0-.. i-l\te < : o j i i D i e
All O d d s and &nds in c l e w e i r y a t C o s t . G o m e in a n d b o o k T h i s O v e r . A b o v e P r i c e s a r e l e s s than W h o l e s a l e P r i c e s today .
DINKE.L, &f DUNBAR.
valuation.
C h h i o n ntl r i a c k
400 T Y P & W R l T f c R S ^ T r. an M ; - . t i i o. Fala..-r nttcai
Z: m a a n d E g y p t .
Cuius we:o nnvle in China S'o lon« a;-o. it is MI::1. a.- 1 he year 2230 Lb C, but they i„;i.:l nO ha\'e been oiher tban poi". :J : ;S cf metal :-\\^\ inlo port:n
i i . j -
<•] bio sb;iiio. <u:hi ^^ \n-ie ;ill the earlio-4
RE Mrs*', •!,.:• $ 1 2 f'fTTa-rp.:-"''a<;R^ $ 1 2 ^<-('l * i ; e t u i a a a ; of I hot?. B i r k e l t r-ioneys. In r.-;>;-r, i!ie nr.ibie n{ r j \ :;; htt Your Children Learn Typewri t ing !
n t D.-x U-v Tiu-r'iMV i zatini) an-1 n, ma, crco. n i n a p e a- s;.y, » St Home dur icg Vara t ion . Instruct ion '
Book F R E E , Ask E M P I R E T Y P E P . E . N t a h . M r . H a r t k - r a n a F O U N D R Y - B U F F A L O , N. Y. R e r b . . . H ( ; ( j . o ; ; W e r e A n i l A r b c r
— _ _ _ _ _ w-i 'or . - i ^ i d i ie j -dav .
Legal Notices 'ATE of MI'JMiaA>-; Tbo iTonaro lV>nr; fur
' ^ ^ ^ • W * 1 County ci Livii^Htnti. At a FCc-sion cf ^ Court, h3ld at the Frohatc C fficein the V 1-
k n of Howel l , in aaid counts*, on the 17ih day ot J 5 . y A. D. 191«.
Present: H O N . E<IC.KXK A. STOWK, Jurl^e ot ProbaU). In the matter of the estate oT
ERNEST MEYEK, Mfrrtf_i)y itcompetent \ followa:-^^^hav«"i^d^toTey^" Hoiwy v , . ~ _ . u , X H J < . : J %xA Tar Compound and also other lines \ T o h n Chamber* having fliprf in said -*• *"* ^w^****^^**. « » « . < M » V W U « « ^.^=.
//« Uses the Sate and Sure Thing at Home
P. A. Eflrd, Conejo. Calif., writes as sou
c c u r ^ i B pet i t iou, . l l i> R ln e t hat Baid Ernest M e ^ r ; e 8 S ^ t m ^ v e ? e * t t » J r A y t h f f i . F ' b S t i s a mental ly l n c o m o e i e n t person, aad pra?tng 6 5 K E i B H m w a n d TaS- C o m n m n d f S r that he or « « , o t h e r • au i tab l . pcrsou be appoint - ^ ¾ ¾ ° 1 ^ , 5 ¾ ¾ 1 ¾ ^ ¾ ^ p ^ ed gnardiaa i f hia ntatc. ^ - ^ ^ ^ best peaults, always cures
it i« Ordered, Toat the ii?th day of Amr severe colds and sore chest and does A. D 191 , &i ten o'cior-k io the forenoon, at Br-fd not contain opiates or other harmful probate o r V e . he and fe hereby appointed for drugs .** bearing said petition. Unthinking and cOeless people net-
I t is further ordered. Thai, notice thn-pof I»P l e c t t h e i r QOUghS a n d OOlds, n o l r e a l l s « vrren by personal eervice of a copy or this or- ™*S how they weaken the system and d«r upon aaid Emeat Meyer and np«.n snch of hi* vjwer the vital resistance to such grave nearest re lat ives and pre»Hmptive he irvat law O i s e a s e s a s P r o n c n i t l S , p i e u r u y a n d
res ide within" aaid county,*'at "least "fourteen ' «Tgja P t i e u j B O n i a . For promptly
)f suits from a co glyen to all others of hia nearest relatircs and * » d T a r C o m p o u n d . I t s p r e a d s a h e a l
^ounty d a y * previous to *aid day of nearinz;
It i s fnrtter c r i c i f d , That riotfoc thereof he For" promptly averting serious re-
sults__from a cold, use Foley's Honey
•• . 3t; •' • ^..+ /
prean .upt ive heira-at- law hy oepositl&fi c o p i e s ! J f f ^ ° ^ l 3 » l n f m e n e e W n t i n -Ot tbta order in a pjjatofflce. in ervclopen addref-1 ? ? f ? * ? _ J " ^ r * S * * L , • • / • • j 1 \ ^ ™ * * ? ^ * » » atd one to each ot them at thai : reapectnv las k n o w n poat<jffice addronaea, duly registered ar peatace prepaid, at lean fourteen da} A previous t aaid bearing, and that the t ime ot s-.ich aeivice
t h i n g i n r Samed surfaoea, „ , _ „ . , , . Lgt soreness of chest* helps croup* whoop-ne, t » r cough, stuffy wheesy breathing. t o : byonchlal and la grippe cougha.
tliere was no i:ranr>1"'••! coinaue. t'cppni', t h r e r ::ii(l unhl \\orv. \;ac-(l, hnt thry wore m;ini:!;i ' tr .n'd iaii* !uni[s . slmneil" somotimes iik^ i.r:ek, ami in the n;>e <h gold and silver were molded in iin;:s, like the aneiout Irish money i.>f ten centuries a. '-. It a p ^ c i r s almost in-conce:^'ahle tha t a people ^ 'ho created the pyramids and t rerTed such ma:-; nitieent temin'cs should IJ.IVC been entirely iunorant of coins. Yet it Is certain from the s t a t ement s of Herodotus tha t such was the ease. The rlrst coinage of money lu Egypt was not struck to assist t ! j ^ Egypt ians tliem-se lvw in their tWimercial den lings. but,' ra ther , because the foreign merchants with whom tbey traded, the Greeks and the Phoeuicinns, demanded some medium which would have the guaran tee of its value apparen t on it and wfclcb would circulate for that value.
SOME OF THE PRIZE WINNERS IN BETTER BABIES CONTEST
AT MICHIGAN STATE FAIR
a s e a n a a be iaereaaed o n e day for every hundred mile? • r fraction tbereof, h e i w e a a t t e pla-e of depoait s a d Ike place or add re an, or pub l i sh ing a ropy o f t h i s ord«r in tbe P inckney 1> apaich ior three w e K e r rerioaa ta aaid day af h e a r i o r
E U Q E ^ K A. 8 T O W B , jajg J n d g e oT Protatw
w*w
"Por l» a
t Everywh ere'
A chlkl tiUes Dr. Mil«s l^xaU\« Tab-SMB errrboul th«nktn« .4 *nM*dkrtoe,
Five Dsys of Horse Racing. Five d a y s of harness racing will be
offered a t the 1916 Michigan State Fair. The racing events will open on j ^ Labor Day and continue through the ; ' next four days. There will be four races each day, and some of the speed!' eat trotters and pacers in the middle wett wi l l compete for parse*. The race meeting will be conducted under •nafclcw of the abort ship c ircuit
B \ B I E 3 from al! sections of the state were entered in the Better Babies contest a t the 1915 Michigan State Fair. General Manager Dickinson ex« [>ects that -several hundred boys aad girls will be entered this fall. H e
will send entry blanks upon request.
-: Subscribe For The Dispatch, $1.()0
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH
£V
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Sat-
EXCESSIVE HEAT REAPS HARVEST
WJNE D E A T H S FROM H E A T A N D
F I V E D R O W N I N G S REPORT-
ED AT D E T R O I T .
FOUR DIE AT GRAND RAPIDS
APPAM AWARDED TO ENGLISH OWNERS
Norfolk, Va. -Pobswatdon of the British liner Appam, brought into Hampton Honda last February by a German prize crew, wtta awarded* to her English owners, the African Steam Navigation company by Jufcge Dad-dill, of the federal district court.
An appeal will be taken and the final decision in the libel proceedings probably will be given by the United States supreme court.
| In the meantime the Appam will Muskegon and Saginaw Also Report stay at Newport News in the custody
Deaths From Heat Other In- j of the United States marshal, or will _ ., -. be turned over to her owners under tererting News. . . t J . . . . . bond. Her cargo ha* been sold for
— — $634,000 and the money is being held
De t ro i t -Wi th the pen of the kiosk ! b y * Y ° « U r t f " k , T | t , temperature recorder writing a line of W h a t itt *° b e c o m e o f Lieutenant tre for Sunday, the highest points pre- B e r g ' t h < i p r l z e commander, and his •iously attained in 1916 by the mer- c r t } W o f 2 2 m e n m u s t b e d e t e r m I n e d
•ury were again shattered, while the i b y t h e 8 t a t e department at Washing-fatal lists of drownings and sun t o n - T h e y h a v e b e e n 1 I v I n * a b o a r d
strokes continued to grow like the re- t h e A P P a m , claiming her as the prop-tarts of a battlefield in Europe I e r t y o f t h e ^ 1 ^ ^ government, but
Until Sunday midnight the oppree-] t b e * e n e r a l b e l l e f l s t h ¥ t h e y n o w
•Ire heat of the day persisted mak-I w i l 1 b e i n t e r n e d ^oaS with the men log the night one of the most try- ! o f t h e G*1™*11 raiders laid up here, lng In the history of the citv Strong J u d * e W a d d l l l ' s decision, given af-breezes began to blow about 1 o'clock t e r month& o f consideration, held that Monday morning, and the kiosk which t h e A P P a m l o 8 t fter 8 t a t U B ** a P r i z e
had registered 88 degrees at midnight w h e n 8 h e e n t e r e d American territorial sank rapidly. Lightning flashes were w a t e r 8 t 0 r e m a i T X ^definitely. He re-oeen on the eastern horiion and the ^ 1 ^ t h e German contention that the Ion* roll of distant thunder heard > Prussian-American treaty of 1799 per-8howers were reported north of the a I t t e d German prizes to be laid up in city limits, and a slight shower fell A m e r i c a n waters, and held that prizes ©n the east side. could be brought in only by a war
The omclfcl temperature which is ta-1 T e 8 s e l acting as convoy; and then only ken at the weather bureau tower on f o r t b e t e m P ° r a r v ^ 1 1 8 6 8 recognized the roof of the Majestic building, was b y international law. IS degrees at 4 o'clock, which is three ' A n ° P i n I o n * i v e n b v Secretary Lans-degrees higher than it reached Satur- l n g t 0 t h e German ambassador to the day the record day of the season until 8 a m e e f f e c t w a s q u o t e d a t l e n g t h b y
Sunday. t t e c o u r t -Nine deaths from heat, five from A d e c l s l o n b v a General prize court
that the Appam was a lawful prize was held to be without effect upon proceedings of the courts of the United States. The same German court recently adjudged as prize money some $750,000 in gold, taken from the Ap-
drownings and 12 cases of prostrations was the toll of the heat wave for Sunday, according to hospital and police reports.
Three Boys D^own. At 3 o'clock Sunday morning two ' pam when she was captured off the
youths were drowned while bath- coast of Spain by the Raider Moewe. lng. The body of one, about 25 years the vessel itself probably will be de-old, which is still unidentified, was re- layed until the case finally Is disposed covered by Harbormaster Kllng at of in the courts. It is not believed 2:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon. The here It will be contended that Judge clothes of the second, whose body is Waddill's decision annuls the Prussian-still missing, were identified by means American treaty of 1793 on which the of post cards In a pocket book, ad- Germans based their case, as the court dressed to "Mike Hasak," 581 East merely interpreted the treaty and held
It did not apply in the existing circumstances.
CAPTURE 2.658,000 ENEMIES
German Government Issues Statement At the End of the Second Year.
Kirby avenue. Fred Presley, 13 1-2 years old, 24
Hazlet avenue, was drowned near the he*i of Belle Isle Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock.
Four Deaths at Grand Rapids.
Grand Rapids—Four deaths and 15 prostrations, due to the excessive heat Sunday, have been reported. Berlin, by wireless to Sayville, N.
The maximum temperature, as re- Y,—The Germag government has is-ported by the government weather bu- sued officially the figures relating to reau, was 101 at 1 o'clock. the conquests at the end of the second
The dead are: James Riley and year of the war in a statement which John Miscolik, Grand Rapids laborers; reads: one unidentified man, and Mrs. Frank "The Central powers occupied 431,-Vandermer, wife of a proprietor of a 000 equare kilometers against 180,000 local bazaar. a year ago. The enemy occupied in
Muskegon Gets Relief. Europe $2,000 square kilometers, Muskegon—Relief in the shape of a * a i n 8 t i 1 , 0 0 0 .a year ago.
an 11-degree drop !n temperature, coupled with a slightly cooling off lake Turkey captured 2.658,000 enemy sol-breeze, broke up Muskegon's hot wave d i e r 8> a*ainst 1,695,000. Of those 5,-Sunday, with no further fatalities list- j 9 4 7 oncers and 348,000 men wera ed beyond the quartet which follow^ French, 1,019 officers and 1,202,000 the 108 degree mark of Saturday, m « n w e r e Ru»si*n«, and 947 officers which were as follows: Derk Mulder, j and 30,000 men were British. aged 54, local grocer; Lyman G. Wil-1 " T n e w a r b o o t y brought to Germany, lis, aged 63 rooming house owner; j l n addition to that utilized immediate-Joseph Resl'gnol, aged 28, Traverse I & at the front, comprised 11,036 can-City, Mich., pool room proprietor; I non, 4,700,000 shells, 3,450 machine Robert Smith, aged 56, farm hand, of «^ n s and 1,556,000 rifles. Chicago. "According to the list of statistics of
German wounded soldiers. 90.2 per
"The Central powers, Bulgaria and
Two Die at Saginaw. (cent returned to the front; 1.4 per cent
„^*J*Z~. n e W * h ^ 0 ^ B t t h e U e d ; the rest were unfit for service United States weather bureau was o r w e r 6 nle&B^ T n e military meas-establlshed Sunday afternoon when • n r e a o f t h e central powers. In conse-the mercury climbed to 103, the highest in tbe history of the city. Two deaths are directly traceable to the conditions.
THOMPSON IN 1,187 CASES
" M y Conscience Is Clear, Acted Good Saith," He Testified.
in
quence of vaccinations, were disturbed by epidemics."
never
AUTO AND INTERURBAN MEET
Three Men, Two Women and a Little
Girl Lose Their Uvea.
TvVvv
Lansing — Attorney James H. Thompson, facing disbarment proceedings in connection with collection of fees in state inheritance tax cages, admitted acting ln 1,187 cases to which his fees amounted to $26,-484.50. In 68 cases he received no '• fee. "My conscience is clear. I acted ' in good faith," he"testified. Attorney! L. B. Gardner, brother of Probate Judge Henry M. Gardner, who committed suicide because of criticism of hS» action in appointing Thompson ln s o many cases, said that one of the letters left by the jurist explained his brother's connection with the Thompson case And another contained a sjeatbhig indictment of two men.
These letters are now in possession m Attorney Gardner and may be made
by Berle Gardner, a son of
Speeding toward Detroit at the rate of about 40 miles an hour, Ann Arbor "express" car crashed into a big Cadillac touring car, which was crossing the Detroit and Jackson railway tracks at the Hannan road, two miles west of Wayne, instantly killing the three men, two women and one little girl in the motor car, which was reduced to a twisted heap of wood and metal as it. was rolled fully 200 yards ahead of the interurban.
The bodies of all six of the victims were terribly mangled, one of the women being taken from beneath the trucks of the interurban only after the car had been raised by a motor derrick.
The impact of tbe collision threw the passengers on the interurban from their seats; women screamed, and panic r e i g u d as M otorman McCleQan jammed on the sir brakes, in a futile
• o r to avert this tragedy.
AMMUNITION FOR AIDES EXPLODE
F I R E D E S T R O Y E D T H I R T E E N
H U G E W A R E H Q U 8 E 8 ON BLACK
T O M ISLAND,
GLASS STREWN FOR MILES
The Terrlflo Force of the Expk>«ion»
Were Fett in Five States—Plot
Suspected.
New York—Property loss estimated at $25,000,000 was caused by a series of terrific explosions of ammunition awaiting shipment to the Entente Al lies and stored on Black Tom island, a small strip of land Jutting into New York bay off Jersey City.
The detonations, which were felt in five states, began with a continuous rapid fire of small shells, then the blowing up of great quantities of dynamite, trinitrotoluene and other high explosives, followed by the bursting of thousands of shrapnel shells which literally showered the surrounding country and waters for many miles around.
Fire that started soon after the first great crash, which spread death and desolation in its wake, destroyed \S ot the huge warehouses of the National Storage company on Black Tom Island, in which were stored merchandise valued between $12,000,000 and $15,000,000. The flames, shooting Into the clouds> were reflected against New York's "sky line" of towering office buildings, which only a few moments before were shaken to their foundations as by an earthquake.
Miles of streets in Manhattan alone were strewn with broken glass and shattered signs.
Early reports of heavy loss of life were impossible of verifications, and the authorities asserted the number of deaths probably would be small. It was said that owing to the extent of tbe wreckage it might be several days before the exact figures could be obtained.
The cause of the disaster had not been determined as y e t Officials of the National Storage company and the Lehigh Valley railroad, which also suffered heavily through loss of property, declared l however, that reports to them showed a fire started shortly after 1 o'clock Sunday morning on a barge belonging to an independent towing company that had been moored alongside a dock used by the railroad company to transfer ammunition shipments from trains to vessels in the harbor,
The barge, it was said, was there without authority either of the railroad on the storage company. "The officials refused to disclose the name of the independent towing com-pany t saying they were investigating "to ascertain whether the barge purposely had been set on fire as the result of a plot."
MARKET QUOTATIONS Live 8tock.
DKTRO IT—Cattle Receipts 1,787. Rest heavy ttteers, (8^8 .75 ; best handy weight butcher steers $7.S0'j> 7.75; mixed ateers and heifers $6.75® 7.50; handy light butchers, $6.254.117; light butchers, $5.50^6.25, best cow*, 16..26£ 6.50; butcher cows, $538; common cows, $4.50®5; canners, $8CM-2^i best heavy bulls. $6.25<fr6.50; bologna bulls, $5@6; stock nulls, $4.75(0)5: feeders, $6.50^7.60; siockers, $5.50*J7.
Calves—Receipts 1,069: Best 12© 2.50; common and heavy> $7&8; mediums, $106/11.50.
Sheep and Lambs—Receipts 1,957: heat Uvmbs, $10.60; fair lambs, $9.75 #10. : 5; light to common lambs, ?8/j? y.26; fair to good sheep, $5.50@'j.60; culls and common, $3(^)4.
HogB—Receipts 3,835: The market was fairly active for anything good and the tops brought $9.75 to $10, and pigs $8 to $9.50.
EAST BUFFALO—Receipts of cattle, 150 cars ; market 26@40c lower; choice to prime native steers, $9.50® 10; good to choice, [email protected]; fair to good, $8.25®8.75; plain and coarse, $7.50g*>8; Canadian steers, 1,250 to 1,-350 lbs., $8.50@9; do 1,250 to 1,350 lbs., $8^)8.25; mixed heifers an/t steers, $7.50<Q>8; prime dry-fed yearlings, [email protected]; best handy steers, $8 @8.25; light butcher steers, $7.25® 7.50; best butbhering steers and heifers mixed, $7.50@>8; western light common heifers, grassers, $6.50@7; prime heavy fat heifers, $7.50@8; best heavy fat cows, [email protected]; butcher cows, $6.25(g6.50; cutters, $5©5.25; canners, $3.50(g>4; fancy bulls, $6.75® 7; butcher bulls, [email protected]; common bulls, $5.60<3>6; good stockers, $7® 7.25; light common stockers, [email protected]; light common stockers, $6(5)6.25; be^t feeders, $7.25(g>7.50; milkers and springers $70® 100.
H6gs: Receipts, 50 cars; market 10c higher; heavy, [email protected]; york-ers, $10.36<§ 10.40; pigs and light, $10 ©10.25.
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 15 cars; market steady; top lambs, $10.50® 10.75; yearlings, $8.50®9; wethers, $7.75®8; ewes, $7®7.50.
Calves—Receipts, 900; market strong; tops, $12.50®12.75; fair- to good, $11.50®12; fed calves, $4.75® 6.50.
MICHIGAN BREVITIES Elevator Boy Hero of Fire.
Grand Rapids.—Charles Dalga, aged eighteen years, is the hero of Grand Rapids. After the asmoke had cleared away from the Ashtou building which was destroyed, entailing a loss of about $200,000, stories of Dal-g V heroism began to leak ouL Although flames were shooting up tbe elevator shaft, Dalga stuck to Ms post until he had carried fifty persons to safety. He did not stop running the lift until the flames^ caused the cables to part. The safety device saved Dalga from being dropped into the basement when the flames were roaring In the shuft. He climbed to the fifth floor window and was rescued by firemen.
Eight Boys Held For Theft Pontine—When the eight Detroit
newsboys, arrested here on a charge of breaking into and robbing the grocery store of Archie Strong at Orchard Lake, gained their release by the payment of fines, they were all rearrested for Detroit oflftcers on a charge of stealing the automobile which they drove from Detroit to Cass lake and left wrecked in the ditch a quarter of a mile from the Strong store.
Convict Kilted by Train. Jackson.—William LaGrange, a
convict employed as driver of one of the prison farm teams, met death at the Blackstone street crossing of the Michigan Central railroad, when a hayrack, upon which he was riding, was struck by a fast passenger train from the West LaGraDge came to prison from Tort Huron, May 20, 1915, on a sentence of from two to five years for larceny.
BRITISH AND FRENCH GAIN
Germans Suffer Enormous Losses In
Counter Attacks.
London—After an artillery bombardment so terrible that the advanced sections of the German third line were swept away, the British and French smashed orward in a tremendous assault on a front of eight miles. From east of Delville wood to the Somme, the blow was struck and whole systems of trenches, work of months, were carried.
Great losses were Inflicted on the Germans, who, rallied ln a series of terrific counter attacks, according to official dispatches from the scene'of conflict More than 500 prisoners were found in the shattered ditches and dugouts.
The most pronounced gains were made by the British. Men from the homeland and the colonies, Irish and Indians, combined in the great t h r u s t The troops smashed forward beyond the Waterlot farm, Trones wood and the Maltzorn farm, formerly mere out-po&ts of the British fronta breaking well be vend the frontiers of the German third line, and establishing themselves in strong positions.
On the British right, the French. Attacking simultaneously on a front from a heighth northeast of Harde-court to the river,' carried a German trench system- on a front for a distance, at one point of half a mile, seised a foothold i s Manrepas and eotMjoered a wood and powerfully fortl fled quarry north of Mem. 8treet ftgBting it DOW going oa la Manrepas, a Tillage stronghold wkScsv baa wita stood until tne present all assaults.
Grain, E t c
DETROIT--Wheat, cash No. 2 red, $1.29 1-2; September opened with an advance of 2c at $1.29 1-2, advanced to $1.31 1-2, declined to $1.31 and closed at $1.35 1-2; No. 1 white, $1.25 1-2.
Corn—Cash No. 3 83 1 2c; No. 3 yellow, 85c; No. 4 yellow, 83®84c.
Oats—Standard, 45 l-2c, No. 3 white 44 l-2c; September, 41c No. 4 white, 42 l-2@43 l-2c.
Rye—Cash No. 2, 96c bid. Beans—Immediate and prompt ship*
ment_ $5.80. Seeds—Prime red clover, $9; prime
alslke, $9.40; prime timothy, $3.10; prime alfalfa, $10®11.
Hay—No. 1 timothy. $17.50® 18; standard timothy, $16.50® 17; light mixed, $16.50® 17; No. 2 timothy, $14 ®15; No. 1 mixed, $12® 13; new No. 1 timothy, $14.50® 16; No. 2 mixed, $8® 10; No. 1 clover, $10® 11; rye straw, $7.50®8; wheat and oat straw, $6.50 ®7 per ton ln carlots( Detroit.
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots: Bran, $24; standard middlings, $26; fine middlings, $33; cracked corn, $35; coarse cornmeal, $33; com and oat chop, $32 per ton.
Flour—Per 196 lbs. in eighth paper sacks: Best patent, $6.60; second pa ten t $6.40; s t ra ight 86.20; spring pa ten t $7; rye flour, $6 per bbL
Minister Drives ice Wagon. Flint.—Rev. H. J. Clifford has
donned overalls and will spend his vacation delivering ice to poor families in the city, where it is needed to keep milk fresh for babies. He has made arrangements with the local Ice company to take all of the broken Ice from the plant and personally drive a delivery wagon to carry Jhe ice where It ls needed.
Owosso Msn Is Killed. Owosso.—The badly-mangled body of
John Miller, twenty-eight years old and single, an Ann Arbor railroad brakeman, with headquarters here, was found at Durand, after he had been missed, when a freight train he was on reached Owosso. It is thought that Miller missed his train and fell under the wheels in trying to catch a train following. His father, John L. Miller, lives ut Port Austin.
Five Drown In Portage Lake. Calumet.—Jnmes Pryor, head of the
Pryor Lumber company, Houghton, and four companions, Including Mrs. Pryor and their two children, were drowned In Portage lake when their motor Uoat hl^ji submerged log. The boat Rank n l rh^f Instantly and there was no time to get out life preservers.
4= 7 Governor^Ferrls td Retire.
Lansing,—Gov. Woodbridge N. Ferris, the first Democrat to occupy the executive office In nearly a quarter of a century, will retire from active participation ln Michigan politics at the end of the year, as he sect a telegram to Chairman Stevenson of the Democratic state central committee positively declining to accept the nomination for a third term.
General Markets.
Peaches, $1.75® 2 per bu. Pineapples, $2.75®8 per crate. Cherries, Sour, $3®3.50 per bu. Lemons, California, $9® 10 per box. New Apples, $6®5.50 per bbl, $1.75
®2 per box. Oranges, California Valencies, $4.50
6 per box. California Fruits, Pears, $2.75®3;
peaches, $1.60; plums, $2®2.26 per box.
Lettuce, 66® 70c peT bu. Cabbage, $2.75® 3 per bbl. Tomatoes, $1®1.10 per 8-fb box. Green Corn, $3.75® 4 per bbL Celery, Kalamazoo,-10®25c per doz. New Potatoes white, $2.75®2.85 per
bbL Maple Sugar*—New, 15®16e per lb.;
syrup. $1.25® 1.50 per gaL Onions, Spanish. $1.60® 1.75 per box;
southern, $2.75 per 75-tt sack. Dressed Calves, City dressed, 17 U
®18o; good, 16017«; ordinary, 15015 l-lo per pound.
Tallow, No. L, 7 l i e ; No. 1 , f 1-Jo. Wool, Dealers are tcytng farmers St
f i l e tor flae and M 0 $ t c for 1-4 and M wool.
Hold Monster Barbecue. Iron River.—Iron and Gogebic coun
ties united in holding a monster barbecue, to commemorate the opening up of the Cloverland trail, the trunk highway which links together the east and west portions of the upper peninsula. The celebration was held at Sffrr Soud, midway between Iron wood and Iron River, on the shores of Tamarack lake.
'4
Orders Name Off Ticket Lansing.—Governor Ferris notified
the secretary of state to cancel any petitions filed* for him for the coming primaries either for governor, or **for
-any other office on the Democratic t i cke t" This dispells any idea that the Big Rapids man might be Induced to run for the senatorshlp.
•4m
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17 Drown in 24 Hours. Detroit—Reports received here
show that 17 persons were drowned In Michigan in 24 hours. There were two fafalities In Detroit and 15 ln the state. There were five persons saved by pul-motora in the s tate during tne same time.
M e t * Supreme Cow* Clerk. Lanalag. — Jajr Herts, the depot?
derk of the supreme cottrt was made derii to flU the vacancy canoed by be-death of Charles GL Hopkins two
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I avow tired of my work as a college tn»tructor and buy a Nuw England farm on sight I Inspect my farm and go to board at Bert Temple's. Bert helps me to hire a carpenter and a farmer. Hard Cider, the carpenter, estimates the repairs and changes necessary on the house. Mike commences plowing. I start to prune the orchard tree. Hard Cider builds bookcases around the twin fireplaces. Mrs. Temple hires Mrs. Plllig for me as a housekeeper, and announces the coming Of a new boarder from New York, a half-Sick young woman who needs the country air. I discover that SteJla Goodwin will make a delightful companion and believe she ought not to return to the hot and dusty city for a long time. I squeeze her hand slyly. Together we dedicate "Twin Fires."
It there a better time to make love than the last day of M a y or a better place than a romantlo old country home where there's a murmuring brook, a lovely quiet pine grove, a roae garden and myriad song birds?
CHAPTER IX.
Acteon and Diana. Memorial day dawned fair and
warm. Bert and his wife and all their "help" went off to the village after breakfast There were no painters In my house, and Mike had milked the cows and gone home before I arrived. Miss Goodwin and I seemed to have that little section of Bentford quite to ourselves, after the last of the carryalls had rattled past, taking the veterans from Slab City to the town. Having no flag yet of my own, I borrowed one from Bert, and we hnng It from a second-story window, facing the road, as our tiny contribution to the sentiment of the day. Then we tackled the rose trellis, speedily completing i t for only two arches remained to be built* one of the carpenters having built three for me the day before, while waiting for some shingles to come for the barn. Indeed, we had it done by ten o'clock.
"Now what?** said she. I looked about the garden. The roses
had not yet come, so we couldn't very well plant them. I judged that the morning of a warm, sunny day was no time to transplant seedlings. The painting was not yet completed Inside, so I could fix up no more of my rooms. The vegetable garden didn't appear to need cultivation. We couldn't paint the trellis, as there was no green paint
"Good graciousr I exclaimed, "this is the first time I've been at a loss for something to do. It's a terrible sensation."
"Couldn't we build a bird bath?" she suggested.
"Madam," said I, "you are a geniusP "At the brook r she added "No, not the brook. I've a better
'idea," said I. "My plan is to put the bird bath on the east edge of the lawn, halfway between the bouse and the rote aqueduct, corresponding to the
Mondial in the center, and to a white bench which will be placed at the west tide when the grape arbor is bu i l t "
"Approved," laughed Miss Goodwin. We measured off the spot and I
mixed a lot of cement laid it over set the bottomless box frame upon i t and built up the four
Aa the girl had no gloves, I not allow her to handle the
it (for nothing cracks the akin tetdly, as X had discovered in my
orchard work). But she kept busy mixing with the hoe, and handing me brides. Borne I broke and put In endwise, and I was careful to give all as Irregular a setting as possible, till the tap was reached. Then, of coarse, I laid an even line of the best bricks all the way around, and leveled them carefully. We had scarcely got the last brick on when we heard Bert's carry* all rattle over the Bridge and Berf i Toice yelling "DinnerP
"Oh, dear! That cement in the box will harden r I cried, "bump it all la."
Thee, mixing mere cement I laid a square bowl, aa It were, two inches t e e* , on the top of the little brick pile, We let It settle a few momenta, and
carefully broke away the box. •toed the bird bate.
- •'Can we put water In it jretT* the f M asked,
-•erely," said I. "Cement will hanS-water. And well plant ciiaab-
fjsj artstvrtisuM around K. toe," W* vtmmi tbmi l the
kitchen, dining room, and ball were finished aud the paint drying. They looked very fresh a ad bright The south room, as we stepped into i t was flooded with sunlight and cheerful with rugs and books. Flinging wide the glass door, we stepped out upon the terrace of the pergola-to-be, and looked toward the new bird bath. Upon its rim sat a song sparrow I Even as we watched, another came and fluttered his feet and breast daintily through the trembling little mirror of water. Then came a robin and drove them both away.
"The pig!" laughed Miss Goodwin. "Do you know, I've got a poorer opinion of robins since I came here. We city dwellers think of robins as harbingers of spring, and all t ha t and they epitomize the bird world. But when you really are In that world, you find they are rather large and vulgar and— and sort of upper West side-y. They aren't half so nice as the song sparrows, or the Peabodles, and, of course, compared with the thrushes—well, It's like comparing Owen Meredith with Keats, isn't It?" .
"Don't be too hard on the robins," 1 smiled.
We looked our fill at the new bird bath, which was already functioning, as she said her boss on the dictionary would put I t and at the white sundial pillar, and at our prospective aqueduct of roses, and at the farm and the far hills beyond—and then she suddenly announced with great energy that she was going to saw wood.
"You may saw just one piece," said I, "and then you are going to take a book and rest I'm going to work, myself. Twin Fires is getting in shape fast enough now so I can give up part of the daytime to the purely mundane task of paying the bills."
"That's Why You Wanted Me Work Until Five ©'Clock 1*
to
I wheeled up a big dead apple branch from the orchard to the wood shed, put it on the buck, gave her the buck-saw, and watched her first efforts, grinning.
"Go away," she laughed. "You bother me."
So I went, opened the west window by my desk to the wandering sum* mer breeze, and went at my toil. Presently I beard her tiptoeing Into the room.
"Doner said L She nodded. "Now I want—let*s see
what I want—well, I guess 'Martus the Epicurean' and 'Alice in Wonderland* wOl do. I'm going to alt in the orchard. Tou work here tfll five or your salary will be docked. Good-by."
I beard her go out by the front door, and then silence settled over the sun-filled, cheerful room, while I plugged away at my tasks. I don't know bow long I worked, but finally my attention began to wander. I wondered If she were still i s the oscbaid. I looked out upon the sweet atretriiea of my farm, with the go4dea light of afternoon upon f t and work betas** a burden. "8haJl I ever be able to work, except at night, er est rainy dajsT* I wondered with a
reading into a drawer, and went out through the front entrance.
The girl was nowhere to be seen. "She's probably in her beloved plues," I reflected. "It would be a good time to clean out a path In the pines." I turned back to get a hatchet, and then went down toward the brook.
I trod as noiselessly as I could through the maples, thinking to surprise her at her reading, and took care in the pines not to step on any dead twigs. She was nowhere to be seen near the upper end of the grove, but as I advanced I heard a splashing louder than the soft ripple of the brook, and suddenly around a thick tree at a bend in the stream, where the brook ran out toward the tamarack swamp in the corner of my farm, I came upon her She had her shoes and stockings off, and with her skirts held high she was wading with solemn, quiet delight in 8 little pool. Her back was toward me. I could have discreetly retreated, and Bhe been none the wiser. B u t alas! Acteon was neither the first nor the last of his sex. The water rippled so coolly around her white anklesl The sunlight dappled down so charmingly upon her chestnut hair! And I said, with a laugh, "So that Is why you wanted me to work until five o'clock!"
She turned with a little exclamation, the color flaming to her cheeks. Then she, too, laughed, as she stood in the brook, holding her skirts above the water.
"Consider yourself turned to a stag," she said.
"All right," I answered, "but don't stay In that cold water too long."
"If I do it will be your faul t" she smiled, with a sidelong glance. Then she turned and began wading tentatively downstream. But the brook deepened suddenly, and she sank almost to her knees, catching her skirts up Just la time. I withdrew hastily, and called back to her to come o u t When I heard her on the bank, I brought her a big handkerchief for a towel, and withdrew once more, telling her to hurry and help me plan the path through the pines. In a moment or two she was by my aide. We looked at each other. Her face was still flushed, but her eyes were merry. We were standing on almost the exact spot where we had first me t But now there seemed in some subtle wise a new bond of intimacy between us, a bond that had not existed before this hour. 1 could not analyze i t but I felt i t and I knew she felt i t But what she said was:
FRENCH TAX ON AMERICANS
Those Having "Habitual Residence" In France Are Classified and
Mutt Pay.
The monthly bulletin of the American chamber of commerce describee the new French income tax, especially as it affects foreigners residing in France, says the New York Sun.
Article 6 of the law says: "A general income, tax is due on January 1 of each year from all persons having a habitual residence in France. Those persons are considered to have a habitual residence in France who have a dwelling at their disposition either aa proprietors, beneficiaries by usufruct or tenants, when in the latter case the lease is arranged either by a single agreement or by successive agreements for a continuous period of at least one year."
Article 11 says: "Aa far as persons not domiciled in France, but having one or more residences there a re concerned, the taxable income is fixed at a sum equal to seven times the rental value of such residence or residences unless the income derived by the taxpayer from properties, enterprises or professions located or exercised In France reaches a higher figure, In which ease the latter amount la taken for the basis of the tax"
Americans living in Paris or elsewhere in France are thee divided by law Into two classes—those pursuing a gainful business or professional occupation and those who do no t Those not tngfujr* ha business must pay a tax, their income being estimated at
the rental value of the establishments which
they contract to take for a eoatiauoes of on* year. Those sssjssjid am
"1 told you to work till five o'clock." "It's half-past four." 1 answered.
"Besides, you must have sent tor me. Something suddenly prompted me to come out and hunt you up, at any rate."
To aay I sent for you 1» rather— rather Tor ward, uuder the circumstances, don't you think?"
"It might be—aud It might not be," 1 answered. "Did you have a good time?"
"The betit I ever had—till you spoiled It," she exclaimed. "Oh, the nice, cold brook! Now, let's build the path you spoke about once."
We went back to the maples, where Vhe ground was open, aud selected a spot on the edge of the plues where the path would moat naturally enter. Tbeo we let It wind along by the brook-Wheu we reached the haytield wall beside the bouse it was nearly six o'clock.
"Now, let's just walk back through It!" she cried. "Tomorrow we can bring the wheelbarrow, can't we, and pick up the litter we've made?"
"I can, at any rate, while you wade," said 1.
She shot a little look up into nay face. "I guess I'll help," she smiled,
In the low afteruooii light we turned about and retraced our steps. There was but a fringe of pines along the southern wall, and as they were forty-year-old trees here the view both back to the house and over the wall Into the next pasture was airy and open. Then the path led through a corner of the tamarack swamp wherein wet weather I should have to put down some planks, and where the cattails grew breast high on either side. Then it entered the thick pine grove where a great many of the trees were evidently not more than fifteen or twenty years old and grew very close. The sunlight was shut out, save for daggers of blue between the trunks toward the w e s t The air seemed hushed, as if twilight were already brooding here. The little brook rippled softly.
As we came to the first crossing, I pointed to the pool, already dark with shadow, and said, "It was wrong of me to play Acteon to your Diana, but I am not ashamed nor sorry. You were very charming in the dappled light, and you were doing a natural thing, and In among these little pines, perhaps, two friends may be two friends, though they are man and woman."
Bhe did not reply at once, but stood beside me looking at the dark pool and apparently listening to the whisper of the running water against the stepping-stones. Finally she said with a little laugh, "I have always thought that perhaps Diana was unduly severe. Come, we must be moving on."
Once more we entered the pines, following the new path over the brook again to the spot where we first bad met There I touched her hand. MLel us wait for the thrush here," I whispered.
I could see her glimmering face lifted to mine. "Why here?" she asked.
"Because It was here we first heard him."
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
business whose income exceeds Beven times the rental value of their one or more places of residence must make a declaration of their total Income from French sources only. The law does not apply in the case of the latter to Income derived from property held elsewhere than in France.
Forming Habits. We believe in the greatest freedom
for the youth; we believe in a happy environment that will create noble characters; we believe the spirit ol the boy should be held sacred and directed toward the achievement of higher thingj in life than social gossip and amusement, and we believe that the encouragement of pool playing as an adjunct of the public schools, it makes no difference how many boards of education, committees, public meetings, may favor It, is a mistake. The idea that we must resort to games to hold the boys to their school work carries with it the Impression that our school methods are wrong, and there can be no other justification of pool playing in schoolrooms than that impression. Education should be given world-wide room. It should be as free as the air on the prairies. It should never be contracted to a habit-forming amusement in response to the exactions of this materialistic age.—Columbus (0.) Journal
-Mereerlal." The adjective mercurial, like many
others, came into ordinary speech from t h e realm of astrology. la astro* logical language a mercurial man was one bora under the influence of Mercury, when Mercury was In the ascend ant and therefore imssmsml of mental qualities supposed to gulsh the heathen.
RANCHING >J
Cattle and Horse Ranching in Western Canada — Steers Brought 10 Cents a Pound
on the Seattle Market
That big money is made by the large cattle rancher in Western Canada, and also by the small fanner as well, is shown by the undisputable facta presented from time to time. A rancher, near Gleichen, Alberta, who commenced In a small way nine years ago, recently disposed of 1,243 cattle at a total of $101,304.50, and this was only his surplus stock for the present season.
A December shipment of 217 head of ranch steers brought the owner an average of over $80 per head. They were taken straight from the runge without any grain feeding and were In excellent condition to be sold for the Christmas trade. Another shipment of 100 head, averaging $70 each, was made to Seattle. The highest price paid on the Seattle market was for an Alber-tan steer, which weighed 1,700 lbs., and brought the fancy price of 10c per lb., or $170.
Six carloads of live stock from ranches 65 miles from Plncher, Alberta, shipped to Spokane, excited keen competition there on account of their exceptional quality. The price realized was $10,028. American dealers say they must look to Canada for beef supplies.
A livestock firm, which has shipped over 2,000 head of beef cattle to the American farmer since the middle of November, reports a splendid reception of Alberta stock in the United States.
A carload of choice Alberta steers were sold early in January for shipment to the British Columbia coast at $6.70 per 100 lbs. and, later on, a lot from Carstairs brought $6.90—the highest price paid since the spring of 1915. Shipments from Calgary livestock yards during 1915 were: Horses, 8,675; cattle, 30,577; hogs, 144,515; sheep, 12,410. A course in agriculture and livestock demonstration which has been conducted by the Provincial Dept. of Agriculture here was well attended, showing the Interest taken by city residents In agricultural progress.
John Young, of Sidney, Man., gives his experiences In sheep-raising as follows, as quoted In a local paper:
"I bought a bunch of fifty ewes, which cost me $262.50. With this little flock I demonstrated Just what can be done in the sheep business. This fall I sold fifty fat lambs at $6.50) per head, $825, and 18 of the best ewet lambs, which I kept, I value at $8,001 per head, $144. The wool sold at an av-j erage of $2.07 per heed, $103.50. Thigv makes the very nice total of $572.50."
"They ran out nearly every day all winter. The value of hay and oat* was small, and one can make them; very comfortable through the winter1
with very little expense. For shelter. I have a shed, about 125 feet long and, 14 feet wide, which I cover with straw.. This gives them protection from the* cold winds; yet It is always cool) enough to be healthy."
"I Intend going in more for sheep this fall, as I believe them to be the, most profitable stock on the farm."'
Desire of farmers and ranchers to increase their sheep holdings Is indicated by the sale of 2,500 head recently at $9.00 each. High woolj prices and profitable demand for mutton are the reason given for such a, figure.
Manitoba sheep breeders arranged' last year for the Provincial Depart-^ ment of Agriculture to handle their; wool output on a co-operative basia;
and obtained most satisfactory results. About 75,000 lbs. of wool were han-1 died,* netting the shippers ova" 25o per lb.—Advertisement
Just a Hint . Mayor Smith of Dtica was urging
a municipal reform. "It will be best to pot through a gen
tle method, by hints and suggestions," he said. "Hints and suggestions are often more efficacious than heroic measures.
"A man in a barber's chair had a big claw in his watchchain.
" 'Bear clawT said the barber. •"Yep/ " 'I suppose you killed It yourself,
atrr 14 'Yep.' •"Was rt a bxg bearr "'About as big as a two-year-old
steer.' 44 'My goodness, sir, how many bul
let? did it take to kill hlmT " 'None.' " 'My goodness, did you kill him with
a knife T "•No/ •"Then—then, er—* • n talked him to death,' said use
man in the chair significantly."
William H. Gannett of Augusta, Me* Is building a one-room house la a large tree on has estate.
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