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The Clinton Republican.

VOL. XL—NO. 0. ST. JOHNS, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1895 . WHOLE NO. 2,035.

LOCAL MATTERS the service. The commandery then BREVITIES.; BROMLEY WINS H18 CASE. Dr. Lee. The Republican. marched to the cemetery and decorated R. G. Steel spent Sunday in Grand Cbsvncsy M. Lathrop, of Osceola County Must Pay Again. My next visit to St. Johns will be on Special care taken in repairing solid the graves of fallen Sir Knights. The Rapids. gold and filled cased watches usual morning and evening services Friday, May 31st, for one day only, at C.C. VAUGHAN, Publishes . Mrs. Thomas Bromley visited Detroit In December previous to the failure The 8teel. Yours respectfully, A t A llison ’s were held in the other churches. Rev of the Michigan Mortgage Company yesterday. ' W. J. M. Lee. M. D. Gardner again occupied the M. E. pulpit Limited Chauncey M. Lathrop, of Strictly la Advance, •1.00 Ladies clean your kid gloves with in the evening. Mrs. Ida Wickes visited friends in Osceola county, paid $300 mortgage to business locals . Josephine Glove Cleaner and take Lem * * # Flint, over Sunday. Oar advertising rstee are *100 per columa per the company, which had been assigned annum. Businas* notice* fire cent* per line for on Bitters for dyspepsia and loss of Hon. Washington Gardner delivered Renewal and increase of pension to to Thomas Bromley. The money was By special request of some of our lead ­ each insertion. Editorial notices, ten cent*. his famous war lecture, “The Struggle ing business men of St. Johns, Mr Lew Business cards, *1 per line per year. appetite, a sure and safe remedy. Sold Edward F. Somers, WacouBta. not turned over to the latter Owens, of Detroit, will give a grand Marriage, birth and death notice* Inserted free. only at Fildew & Millman ’s Pharmacy, for Chattanooga, ” at Newton Hall Satur­ Obituary comment*, resolution*, card* of thanks, Clinton County Teachers’ Association nor did he have any knowledge of Phonograph entertainment at the etc., will be charged for at the rate of fire cent* St. Johns and Fowler. 51tf. day evening. Mr. Gardner was in the at the high school room Saturday. the payment, but continued to hold his Grand Opera House on Thursday evening per line. service three years before he was 20. He next, May 30th, where you will be able Correspondence containing local new* ia solicted A Demorest Medal Contest will take mortgage and notes. He brought suit to hear all the leading bands of the from all parts of the oounty. VARIOUS TOPICS. is a most accomplished and interesting Anonymous communications not inserted under place at the M. E. church tonight. in Osceola county to foreclose the mort ­ country, namely: Sousa ’s, Gilmore ’s, ny circumstances. speaker, and his description of the fear­ gage, but the court held that the pay­ Altogether the roost important local Prof. Bart McLellan will make a U. S. Marine band of Washington, 23d ful struggle and carnage at Chicamauga, ment was good and entered a decree of Regiment band, of New York, Baldwin ’s event during the past week was the Miseionary Ridge and Lookout Moun­ balloon ascension at Lansing tomorrow. Cadet band, of Boston, Holding ’s Mili­ JOB PRINTING. ceremonies attending the laying of the discharge. The case was appealed to Our material is new and of the latest styles, and tain, held hia audience spell bound. - A. Chapin has been appointed poet- tary band, and many others of equal we guarantee satisfaction, both in prices the supreme court, the latter reversing ability, also banjo selections by Thos. corner stone of the new M. £. church * master at Oral, vice Frank Robinson, and quality of work. last Saturday- Mr. Martin and ths * # the decision of the circnit court. The E. Glynn, the world ’s champion banjo- As heretofore noticed in these columns resigned. ist, and all the leading comic and senti­ BUSINESS DIRECTORY society made very complete arrange ­ opinion was rendered Tuesday. This the Elsie hotel proprietor nailed up hie Mr. and Mrs. Al. Lambie, of Grand mental songs by noted singers, funny ments, the day was perfect, and a very decision ia in line with thedecision in sayings, stump speeches and many ATTORNEYS. house and moved to Ovid because the Ledge, visited relalivee in St. Johns, the Vance case. Fedewa & Walbridge large number of people present. It was Elsie board fixed the bonds so high he others too nnmerons to mention. Besides LEWIS sivERANCE. A. B. remarked that the crowds present re* over 8unday. conducted Mr. Bromley ’s case you can hear the ravings of that once ttorney , justice of the peace and could not furnish them, and therefore Cut Flowers —carnations, lillies and great actor, John McCullough, who Circuit Court Commissioner, Office orer minded one of fair time or a Fourth of was debarred from selling liquor. Elsie GIANT POWDER. went insane over his great play, Vir­ APutt’s Grocery. ' roses —tor Decoration day, at Mrs July celebration. Rev. Washington folks made up their minds that the ginias. Yon hear him exactly as he WM. N, STOCKER, Gardner, secretary of state; Rev. Hickey, Estes’ greenhouse. Nearly Got In Its Deadly Work on George carried on white confined in the Bloom- oldiers and comrades , i being one town would prosper -better without a Jury. ingdale insane asylum. Mr. Owens has S of your number, therefore know your wants presiding elder; Rev. Ferguson, of Ovid; saloon. As there was only one hotel, Pie social at the Congregational chnrch and also your rights hy law, therfor* respectfully so ­ Saturday morning while blasting one of the loudest machines in America licit rour patronage in the prosecution of claims for and Rev. Corman, of Maple Rapids, and that closed, a public meeting was rooms tonight. All kinds of pies. and can be plainly heard 800 feet away. pensions, back pay, bounty or rations. Also Notary arrived before noon, and were escorted stone for R. 8. Clark’s new house on Public. Enquire at Putt’s grocery. held last week, and it was decided to Everybody invited. Ask those who have heard it and you 28tf WM. N. 8TOCKEK. to tiie brick building opposite the church open a new hotel at once unless the T. C. Beach, of Elmira, N. Y., was in Higham street, George Jury received'a will be convinced. People who attended for dinner charge of gunpowder and brick dust in the phonograph entertainment given by 1. H. FKDEWA. H. K. WALBRIDGK owner of the old house reopens his or St. Johns, over Sunday. He returned Mr. Owens, under the auspices of the FEDEWA A WALBRIDGE, About 2 o ’clock the formal exercises leases it. The people are thoroughly home Monday night. his eyes. He and George Smith had C. E. society of the Congregational ttorneys at law , st. Johns , mich. opened in Newton Hall, Rev. D. D. just drilled a large stone and after church .in Ovid May 20th, last, were Over Travis A Baker’s. aroused and will not be dictated to. P. R. Freeman and wife, of Orange A Marlin presiding. Nearly all the siugers * * filling it with giant powder, began more than satisfied, and the church B. M PERRIN. r. K. PERRIN. A. J. BALDWIN. * Heights. Florida, formerly of Victor, could not hold all who wished to attend. in town united in one large choir, and Wilbur Chureh, of this village, is the tamping it down. The (concussion PERRINS A BALDWIN, the St. Johns band, heading a large are visiting friends in this county. caused the powder to explode with a Admission will be within reach of all, ttorneys at law , money loaner owner of a very promising 4 year-old and yon can get your reserve seat tickets and Real state Agents. Office ove delegation of Canton Hope, I. O. O. F., Prosecuting Attorney Norton and tremendous force, knocking Mr. Jury at Aldrich’s Book Store. Adults 15 WickeaA ’grocery. Clinton Ave., 8t. lohns. Mich. pacing mare, raised by himself. She Judge Daboll are in Owosso today, the also furnished music. Every seat in the has never been in a race, but was handel. down. His hands were badly cut by cents; children under 15,10 cents. Come EDWIN U. LYON. JOHN C. DOOLINO. hall was occupied, many stood and former for the defence in a criminal the pieces of biick and his whole face one, come ail. and you will go home ed a little last fall by Sehenck, the feeling perfectly eatisfied. Selections of LYON A DOOLINO. many others went away unable to gain suit. completely filled with the dust. A ttorneys at law , st. Johns , mich. owner of Lucy M., and has been jogged home talent will be taken and repro ­ A Office over Kendrick ’s store. 35tf- admission. The exercises opened with enough for tx< r iae this spring. A* the M. D. Hubbard, secretary of tne St. buggy was procured and Allie Brainard duced to the audience, and the phono ­ graph thoroughly explained. It will be SPAULDING NORTON & WEI MER music by the band, followed by the fairground Friday she paced a half-mile Johns Spring Company, has been ab­ drove in haste to Dr. Gillam’s othce. ttorneys at law . office over st. choir, ami a brief welcome by the vil­ sent in Illinois and Iowa the pa9l week, The doctor made a slight examination instructive to both young and old, as Johns National Bank. in 1:12j and good horsemen say she well as entertaining. A lage president and Judge Daboll. Revs. and secured some good orders. and took Mr. Jury to his home near WALBRIDGE A OSBORN. can turn a mile track in 2:15. She is See our lawn mowers ^TTORNEYS AT LAW, ST. JOHNS, MICH Hall, Butler and Blanchard gave frater­ very gentle and level headed, and is un ­ Mrs. Cora Jury, of Essex, died May the Perrin school. It was at first Spaulding & Co. nal greetings lor their respective doubtedly a very valuable animal. She 27th, of consumption, aged 21 years. thought that he bad lost both of his PHYSIOIANS. churches, and Prosecuting Attorney will be entered in a number of races. She leaves a hnsband and one child. eyes, but after they were dressed he Want to Organize ail Orchestra. Any parties desireous of going in Norton for the fraternal socities, fol ­ Mr. Church expects to sell her as soon Deceased was a daughter of Charles couid see very plainly. HENRY PALMER, M. D. same write me or leave word at l ENERAL PRACTICIONER AND PRACTI- lowed by the address of the day by Rev. as he gets a suitable offer. Bond. George Smith, who was not quite a« ~X cal Occulist. Office over Hunt ’s Drugstore. Washington Gardner. Mr. Gardner * 4$ near the explosion as Mr. Jury, received Sturgis ’ Music Store. COffice hours 2 to 5 P. M. 49tf * The remains of Robert Stoweli were R. Julius H ammkll . spoke eloquently and feelingly, and About September first Rev. E. J, brought here from Colorado Springs only a slighl wound over his eye. It 8. E. GILL AM, M. D., commanded the closest attention of the was a very narrow escape for both men. Something new in horse pokes at HYSICIAN AND SURGEON. OFFICE AND Bradner will move to Chicago and take May 27th for interment. Deceased was Spaulding A Co ’s. residence west of Court House. Office hours vast audience. Judge Daboll and Mr. a three years course in the Garret Bib­ The explosion was so fierce as to blow PX to 4 p. h., except Wednesdays from 7 to 9 p m. 39 vears old, and a brother of Mrs. John Norton also gave splendid words of en­ lical Institute, a branch of the North­ Kelley, of East Bingham. the tampering iron from the stone a Carpets. C. E. KNAPP, M. D.. couragement to the good work, the western University. He will preach block away. Some carpets are cheap—cheap in HYSICIAN AND SURGEON. OFFICE ON latter pledging $100 for a memorial Kenyon & Swigart have something to qmlity as well as in price, instead of Court House square—cast of Court House, every Sunday, and carry on his studies A. O. Hunt has a few of those wonder ­ covering six years they are* u«ed up in PBt. Johns. window for the Odd Fellows, while the say about binding twine in their adver ­ during the week. Mr. Bradner was in tisement this week. M. L. Kenyon also ful Evening News tops left. three, consequently cost twice as much DR. R. G. MORRISON. pastors exemplified the spirit of Chris­ Chicago last week and made the neces­ in the end. We sell our carpets as low' describes his prize winner “Weisfuss,” a as good grade carpets can be sold for. HYSICIAN AND SURGEON. OFFICE ON tian brotherhood for which they stand sary arrangements. It is gratifying to 1-loueer Meeting. P CiintoD Avenue, north of railroad. Office in urging a united effort in behalf of perfect horse, to be seen at Kenyon ’s We sell them on their merits, their hours from 9 to 12 a. M .and 1 to 5 P. and 6 to 8 know that he is succeeding well in the The 22d annual meeting of the Clinton beauty and their wearing qualities. evening. Sunday 2 to 5 p. m. tbeir sister church. feed barn. ministry. County Pioneer Society will be held in ______John H icks . RTHUR CORBIN, D. D. S.—Crowns. “Bridge After the close of the exercises at the Mrs. C. A. Holden, of Mason, and the Court House at St. Johns, on Satur­ Money to loan on real estate. A Work" (teeth without plates) and all Latest hall the audience marched to the new Harry Hodges, of Eden, Michigan, were Processes. About thirty members of Elsie Lodge 52tf. Lewis Severance . St. Johns. guests of Mrs. Dr. Dodge during the day, June 8th, 1895. Hon. Washington church, where State street was closely F. A A. M., visited St. Johns lodge last Gardner will deliver the address. Come DR. ERNEST SCHEMER. packed with people from Clfnton ave­ past week. Mr. Hodges is a brother of The largest and finest line of side ­ HYSICIAN AND SURGEON. OFFICE OVER Friday evening and conferred the third and hear him. The music will be fur­ boards ever shown in St. Johns at Hull Gruler's Store, Fowler, Mich. nue Mrs. Dodge. They returned home yes­ P to Spring street. Rev. Hickey took degree. The Elsie brothers are well up nished by the Congregational choir. A Hulse, 16 Clinton avenue, and charge of the ceremonies there, and the terday. opposite the post office. MISCELLANEOUS. in the work. After the close, a banquet Come and enjoy it and the following stone was formally laid. The day was List of letters advertised May 28,1895: * JSSSONS IN SHOUT^HAND AND TYPE- was served in the lodge dining rooms. program : All kinds of repairing At O sborn ’s. I_J writing given by Mrs. J. E. Llttell. Terms a glorious success, and full of encourage­ It was a very pleasant occasion. Rev. Harry Cross, Gime Fenna, Miss Anna Call to order at 10 A. M. reasonable. 7tf ment. Fisher, Francis L. Fox, Frank Jones, Prayer. A large line of pillar extension tables Frederick Hall made appropriate re- At H ull 3r H ulse . E. I. HULL, The society received quite an amount -marks at the banquet. Sidney Naylor, H B. Peabody, Miss Reading of minutes of last meeting. ndertaker .no . i6 clinton avenue . of money from subscription cards sent * * Eva Rawlins, Wm. Scarlett (2), Geo. Reports of secretary and treasurer. Rubber and cotton iawn hose at U Residence 105 Wight street. * Election of officers. out for that purpose, and realized about Weller, Miss Fannie Whitney. Miscellaneous business. Spaulding A Co's. H. M. GOHN, $51 from serving meals, while the Ep- St. John's Guild will hold a birthday ETERINARY SURGEON. GOLD MEDAL- social at the church house tonight, and Supt. J. G. Monroe was called to Olivet Report of obituary committee. A large line of sideboards, from ten Ist of the Ontario Veterinary College Office worth league took in $37 from the sale Adjournment for dinner. V last Saturday to attend the mid-year dollars and upwards, at Hull A Hulse, McDonald ’s Drug Store, night calls at Farmers’ have sent out birthday bags with the AETERNOON SESSION. 16 Clinton Ave. and opposite the post Hotel. St. Johns, Mich. 3 13 of ice cream and popcorn in the Scriven meeting of the Michigan Association of building. following r-torv on the envelope : Music, ‘‘The Water-mill." office. ‘‘Enclosed a birthday bag you ’ll find. Colleges, at which meeting was under Recitation by Miss Grace Pierce, of Green - S. W. INGRAHAM, A large line of baby carriages at TTNDERTAKER. REAR OF FOWLER A The M. M. society has undertaken a And if you'll be so very kind. discussion his paper read before the bush. U Ball's Hardware, St. Johns, Mich. Hull & Hulse, opposite the post office. great enterprise, and need the hearty For each year past, put in a penny. association at Lansing last winter. Paper. "Pioneer Work, ’, by Jay Session, of And glad we'll be if you've had many. Lebanon. Shirt Waists. co operation of every other church an

NOR TH R I L E Y. OVID- MAPLE RA PIDB.

Nok UI BlLKY, May. 28, 1895. O vid , Mty 21,180S.|| Maplk Rapids , Miy 27, 1890. EMEMBER there Mr. ami Mrs. Peart Williams will Mrs. J. Allworth still remains on the George Pay ne is quite sick. are hundreds of brands of move into the teneut house of H. 8 sick list. George Heck, of Lansing, was iu towu White Lead (so called) on the H. Sherman and wife, of St. Johns, last week. Bliss, this week. market that are not White Lead, were in Ovid Wednesday on business. Miss Ann Barnes, of Lansing, is visit­ Mr. Henry Burnes lately lust a vonng composed largely of Barytes and cow; death resulting from a snake-bite a Frank Cowan, of the firm of Farrell ing at J.T. Daniells ’. few days previous. & Cowan, of Hastings, spent Sunday in John Baldwin, of Ionia, is visiting his other cheap materials. But the The Ladies ’ Aid Society meets at the Ovid. daughter, Mrs. Nelson Pease. number of brands of genuine home of Mrs. Jobu Pingel, June tith. A Ovid Rehekahs entertained the Odd Mrs. Perrigo has gone to Lansing and full attendance is desired. Fellows of Ovid, St. Johus and Elsie Battle Creek to visit her sons. Strictly Pure Rev. II. B. Succop, of Ionia, preached last Tuesday. Mrs. C. Blank is very sick with little, to a full house at Lnthenan church of Mrs. W. L. Toby, Mrs. J. V. Retan and if any, hopes for her recovery. Riley, last week Thursday. Mrs. Geo. Huntington attended the Art County treasurer of Gratiot county, White Lead Loan in Detroit last week. John Otto, was in town Thursday. Miss Maud Webster left for Gratiot is limited. The following brands last Thursday, to make a week’s visit C. E. Jillson and wife and Mrs. O. B. Tbe telephone from here to Middle- with her aunt, Mrs. C. Boots. Campbell intend to attend the Detroit ton will also run to Perrinton. The are standard “Old Dutch” process, Mr. Ottis Dane, of Lansing, returned Ait Loan a portion of the week. stock is all taken and work will begin and just as good as they were when home Thursday after a few days ’ visit Rev. G. P. Mitchell left yesterday. soon. you or your father were boys: Monday, for Saratoga Springs, N. Y., Col. Robert Anderson went to St. with his brother. Mr. Joseph Dane. “ Anohor, ” “Morley," Mr. Robert Temple, of Maple Rapids, where he will attend the Baptist Nat­ Johns Friday and remained to hear *' Eckstein,” "Shipman,” Tho rook within thekitchen stood, Her victim was tho grocery-boy, made a flying visit among friends and ional Missionary Convention from May Washington Gardner Saturday and “ Armstrong A XoKeivy, ” “ Southern,” Her hands upon her hips, And softly thus shako she: relatives in Riley Thursday and Friday. 27 to June 8. Sunday. " Beymor-Bauman, ” " Bod Seal,” And many were tho aiiTry words Oh, what a little fool you are, Mrs. J. Dunlap and Mrs. N. J. Clarke E. A. Guthrie, who left here overland ,f Davis-Chambers,” " Collier,” Came pouring from nor lips. To bring such stuff to me. Miss Ester Pratt, of Massachusetts, is " Fahnestook. ” returned last Tuesday evening from some time ago, is at Cummingsville, Tako high prico baking powder back, visiting her cousins, Mr. Lewis Pratt And bring mo “Calumet,” and wife, also other relatives in this Ann Arbor where they attended tbe Ohio, working for $3.50 per day with Foa Colors .—National Lead Co. ’a Pure And If he did not go straightway, May festival at the University Friday his team. White Lead Tinting Colon, a one-pound can to She's likely scolding yet. place. a 25-pound keg of Lead and mix your own Mr. Yaton, of Kentucky, brother of and Saturday. A number of our solid citizens have paints. Saves time and annoyance in matching CALUMET BAKING POWDER COMPANY, CHICAGO. the real mail route contractor from St. Ezra Keys returned last Saturday from been interviewed by the board of review shades, and insures the best paint that it ia bis trip to Holly, N. Y., which he under ­ this week, talking about their raised possible to put on wood. Johns to Grand Ledge, visited the Riley Send us a postal card and get our book on took on a wheel but returned by rail, assessments. HUBBARD8 TON. poet office last Friday. paints and color-card, free; it will probably Joseph Dieghm raised the frame for a having abandoned his “bike” before The Rural New York No. 2 potatoes save you a good many dollars. The Republican. Hubbard.ton, May 27, 1895. barn 30x40, last week Friday, without reaching his destination. can be had at the post office for 80 cents NATIONAL LEAD CO. W. H. and Edwin Gill rode their any accidents. Mr. John Smith, of H. M. High returned last Friday from per bushel. They are scab proof and Chicago Branch, wheels to Ionis last Saturday. State and Fifteenth Streets. Chicago. WEDNESDAY, MAY 20. Fowler, is tbe contractor of the barn. his short business trip to Muskegon. great yielders. An ice cream social was given by the The Lutherians are rebuilding or re­ He brought back with him a fine string Union services were hell in the Jackson —The Tailor. L. O. T. M., last Friday evening. modeling their parsonage, formerly the of brook trout, as a result of a day ’s Christian church Sunday. Rey. Hutch­ Ferris and Cook are now laying brick residence of D. P. Bliss, into a dwelling fishing north of that city. inson delivered a prohibition lecture; a for Redner A lownaend ’s double store. The Maccabees gave their entertain ­ good attendance was present. The County. Commencement exercises will be at house and part into a school room. Mr. Morris Hayes and niece, Miss ment last evening, it having been post ­ Tbe residence of John N. Whitaker M. E. church next Friday evening, GIVE AWAV Ellen Henry, of Fowler, visited the poned a week. J. M. Dorrey, of Flint, caught fire Thursday from a defective May 81st. WACO USTA former ’s wifb, Mrs. M. Hayes, last was present and also Miss Margaret V. flue, and but for tbe timely assistance of C. Churchill is making rapid progress Bower, of Ann Arbor, deputy great com­ Your Old Suit and Ret a Wacousta . May 2", 1895. Thursday, at the home of Mr. and Mrs citizens with the hose and engine, in erecting the walls of Shields A mander of the L O T M. would have been burned. The loss is New One of Robert G. Mason made a business ttip Loftu ’s saloon. R. Landers, Riley. to Lansing last Friday. Mr. David Warren, of St. Johns, for ­ Miss Lena Harris, of Detroit, is visit­ about $100 with no insurance. Win. McSherry has the flouring laid ing her uncle, Joseph Harris, of this Mrs. Saron Plowman spent three days for a steel building, which he is erect merly a resident and pioneer of East E88 EX- with friends in Lansing last week, re­ Riley in its early days, was lain to rest village. She has been studying the past ing for a photograph gallery. Essk .y , May 27. 1895. turning Saturday. in Boughton cemetery May 18th. De year in Paris and was sum­ Miss Nora MeCawlev was visited by moned home by the death of her father, Mrs. Cbesebro visited her son George, A. J. Burnes auJ C. II. Manzer were her mother, Mrs. MtCawley, and sister, ceased was in his eighty-fourth year. in Greenbush, last week. in Lansing on business the fore part of Mrs. Morris Hayes and son, Charles Win. Harris, a few weeks ago. JACKSON Miss Ida McCawley, ot Eagle, this week. Miss Bessie Youngs spent last week last week. F., of Fowler, returned home Saturday Frank Hoyt started on his wheel for Memorial sevicea were held at the Mason one day last week, but when with her sister, Mrs. Davie. Mrs. Herman Bliss, her daughter and M. E. church Sunday morning. Rev. after a few davs ’ visit with her cousin Children’s Day will be observed at the two nieces cauie from Lansing and took Mrs. Robert Landers. Mrs Hayes has fifteen miles out the handle bars broke THE MERCHANT TAILOR. H. R. Hawley rendered a very interest­ and consequently the trip was delayed Love church, Sunday, June 9. dinner with Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. Benedict ing sermon and the 'house was well not enjoyed very good health since a Geo. R. Heck, of Lansing, was in Essex yesterday. severe attack of la grippe late in the until this week, when he intends to try filled. Mr. Hawley also preached the again to make the distance, with no on business, a few days last week. Suits, Overcoats, Mr. Winston, in his round of school baccalaurate sermon for the graduating winter. The Love, Prairie and Hammond visitation last we9k, called on the Miss Daisy Hildreth returned home break downs this time. class in the evening. No special program has been prepared schools will join in having a union pic­ Watertown Center school, Miss Bertha John Cahalan died at his residence, last Tuesday, after spending a few days nic at the close of the summer term. Lyon teacher. in Ann Arbor, attending the May for Decoration day here, except the Pantaloons. one and one-half miles west of town, decoration of the soldiers ’ graves in A program has been prepared for The marriage of Miss Lillie Easton to Wedneeday, May 22nd. Mr Cahalan festival, which was a grand success and Mr. Jickeis is announced to take place a most excellent .feast to all lovers of "aple Grove cemetery. No addresses Memorial day to be given at the Sowle was a native of Ireland. He came to will be given, which will be the first cemetery, beginning at eleven o ’clock. Prices right and Fit next Tuesday evening at the home of this country over foity years ago, and fine music. Words could scarce picture Guaranteed. her father, Orville Easton. tire grandure and .beauty, [or purity ot time for a number of years that nothing Report says Miss Etta Annis has ac­ was one of the first settlers about Hub -pedal has been prepared. cepted the position of grammar teacher NAER POSTOFFIOE No services were held in the Congre bardston. The funeral services were thought brought out in music. About national church yesterday, the pastor four thousand were present to enjoy (J\cr four hundred attended the re­ in the Maple Rapids school for the com­ held at St. Johns Catholic church, which ception of Mr. and Mrs. E. DeCamp on ing year. and his congregation attending the was filled to its utmost capacity. each concert, which were four in num ­ Memorial services at the M. E. church. ber continuing May 17th and 18th. their return from the Old World on Farmers have finished planting their A light ram Sunday morning gave DELTA. Tuesday evening of last week. *Their corn and have begun plowing for beans, place to a clear 6ky in time for a good NORTH WATERTOWN residence was brilliantly illuminated but the prospects are not very good for ASPHALT Delta , May 25, 1895. having any summer yet. congregation* to gather and listen to an Rev. E. J. Bradner spent tbe fore North Watertown, May 27, 1895. and artistically decorated with flora, Miss Melva King, of Lansing, spent which, together with the Tubbs orchestra interesting Memorial discourse by Rev. part of the week in Chicago and Eyan UNION HOME. E. J. Bradner. ston. last Sabbath with her parents here. made the surroundings all the more READY ROOFING Mrs. E. J. Bradner and children Wilbur Miller has moved from the enjoyable. The guests were received L'mioi * H omk , May 28,1895. ALL READY FOR USE A large party of Fred Oppeulander ’a Mrs- B. R. Moore spent several days spent the veek with her parents in St. north part of town to the Cronkrite farm. and refreshed in graceful style and the and ANY ONE CAN APPLY IT. friends from the German settlement in in Elsie last week. the east part of town made him a visit Johns. Charles J. Dills, on Turner street, and evening will be always remembered as . . Contains NO COAL TAR and it practically . . and enjoyed his hospitalities one day E. Phillipps, son of Mr. and Mrs J. Bowers have just erected new Rork one of tbe brilliant social events of the Mrs. Louisa Smith entertains the U. last week. David Phillipp, of Delta, was buried wind mills. season. Among the guests present from H. aid society Thursday, June 0th. All FIREPK00F. are welcome. Miss Belle Gensterblum has given from the M. E. church Sunday, May 19 Memorial service at Wacousta last St. Johns were C. C. Vaughan, Mrs. Ida The best Roofing made for covering leaky special attention, recently in her school, He was s man forty years of age, and a Sabbath was attended by a large crowd Rawson, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hicks James Daf is has recently received an shingle Roofs, and suitable for the best to improvement in writing, and calls on victim of la grippe. from this place. and Mrs. John Hicks; and fromOwosso, increase of pension and back pay which class uf buildings. The Roofs will last many years longer when coated with three of her acquaintances to act as We notice marked improvements on Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Edwards. is in all cases acceptable. LEBANON. Miss Alberta Smith, teacher at Union our Pure Lime Rock Asphalt Paint, committee to decide which scholar has the farms of Henry Wesler and L. F. which is the best and only strictly pure made most progress. Lebanon, May 28, 1895. Conrad by a lot of new wire fence. EUREKA. Home, spent Satuiday and Sunday in Asphalt Paint sold for covering Iron, A tarantula was discovered a few Children’s'dav at Benjamin ’s church Joseph Woolford has made a great Eureka, May 28,1895. St. Johns, the guest of Tip. Steel, Tin or Shingle Roofs. weeks ago making its home in the stem Sunday, June 9th. many improvements on the old J. D. Will Dush is putting down a well for The next meeting of the Ladies ’ Aid We are headquarters for all kinds of Roofing of a string of bananas in A. J. Burnes ’ Rev. G. A. Bowles will preach for a Hamilton farm lately, by painting the G. Hibbard- Society will be held at the home of Mrs Materials, at bottom prices. Asphalt few Sundays in Benjamin ’s church. Earnest Hart does some bicycle re­ Allen Smith Thursday, June 6th. ROOFING complete in five square lots, store, and was coaxed out and captured house, building a new grainary and per square. by a couple of our youDg men, and is Lebanon band is doing some extra remodeling over the large barn. pairing now. Mrs. Geo. Andrus, who has had two now on exhibition in one of the show work, preparing for Decoration day. ‘‘How brown a large number of Quarterly meeting at the U. B. church attacks of sciatic rheumatism, was able windows. The body of it was about two E. Chittenden has left this country orchards look in this township” is re­ last Sunday. to attend tbe society last Thursday. inches long. N. to make his home iu some more pros marked by travelers, caused by a small Decoration day will be observed here Grandma Wells, mother of Mrs. L. H perous locality. black worm working in the foliage. in the “city.” Post, has gone to spend the summer R. M. REYNOLDS & SON, with her daughter, Mrs. Edwin Ham­ O UPLAIN. Bert and George Hiner were- io Orchards visited by this pest look as if Dr. A. O. Hart, of Maple Rapids, was Louis and Campau Sts, Belding the latter part of last week they had passed through a fire. in town last week. mond, of Bengal. Duplain , May 26, 1895. visiting relatives. Washing and shearing sheep ’are the Mr. E. Guthrie’s family moved their Clayton Heslin, son in-law of Mrs. A. GRAND RAPIDS, 0-43 MICH. Sheepwashers are rather busy now. H. Travis has been suffering with a order of the day here. The wool goods to Bannister Monday', and they Phillips, was taken]with hemorrhage of Mrs. Bird is reported slightly under large carbuncle on hisleg. Jay Webster market seems to denote no scarcity by left today bound for Homestead, Benzie the stomach last Wednesday and lies in Low Excursion Kates to Denver. the weather went on the milk route for him Satur­ the prices paid, as a German farmer re­ county.* a critical condition- For full information address W. II. Fred Hosley entertained Miss Ella day. marked the other day that he had no Isaac Eaegle, an old pioneer of Green- Mr. A. H. Reed, who has been a Guerin, 07 Woodward] Ave., Detroit, North, of St. Johns, last week. Mich. Noel Allen, of Maple Rapids, was sheep but that there were sheep some ­ bush, died at his home here last Friday, sufferer from paralysis for some years The ladies aid society will meet with ------«#«...... - awarded contract for painting an I L. where. Sam . aged 89 years. Funeral services were past, and who has recently experienced LITERARY NOTES. Mrs. Wdi . Beurman June (>. Landers for shingling Sessions school held at the E. V. church Sunday, Rev, a slight shock, is recovering. The Church of Christ parsonage is Mrs. Carrie Waltrous went to Ashley, The one subject that is uppermost through­ house. row LCR. Henry officiating. out the country is, of course, the currency receiving a much needed coat of paint Lee Winaus, Callie Mundell and J. Friday, to visit her brother, William question. The first definite —and we might Who eavs a preacher can ’t work? Fowlkb , May 27,1805. Sessions wrote examination for county Mrs. Jas. Pitch is convalescing. RILEY. Ferguson, and will remain until after say, serious and compact —statement that has George Seelye has moved his barn and diploma at Sessions school house last tbe balloon ascension Wednesday. been made by the author of “Coin ’s Financial Mrs. Sydney Parks was on the sick RlLKY, May 28, 1895. School, ” is made in the June number of The is putting a basement under it. Friday. Miss Maude Webster started for tbe Mrs. Aaron Phillips, who has been Mrs. Carrie Dutcher has returned list last week. Forum. In other words, the book which is Canker worms have again attacked north last Thursday to spend a couple staying with her sister, Mrs. McMaster, having such an extensive circulation is practi­ home after a prolonged stay in California Mrs. Myrtle Wagar, of Muir, is spend ­ John Speerbrecker’s andCbas Schmitt’s ing a few days in town. of weeks with friends and relatives. for tbe past two months, has returned cally compressed into the article by Mr. Har­ Emma Gibson, Mr. and Mrs. Harii- apple orchards and completely ruined to her home much improved in health. vey. the author of “Coin ’s Financial School, ” Tbe Catholic school was closed a few Streeter A Bungbole tie the name of which he entitles "The Free Silver Argument." man and friends spent Sunday at S. the foliages. Spraying in the proper the new firm now doing business at the Mrs. Carrie Waltrous went to Ashley Gibson ’s. days as the were sick. This argument is answered directly, statement time would avoid such destruction of Forest Hill grocery. Bunghole runs the last Friday to visit her brother, Wm. by statement, by the Hon. John DeWitt The fnneral of Andrew Sanford was valuable property. Rev. Hewelt has been very sick the past week, but is improving. wagon and Streeter stays in the store. Ferguson, and other relatives, and will Warner, a member of the Coinage Committee held at the Church of Christ Saturday, of the House of Representatives, and a leading VICTOR. Mr. C. Swader and family visited Sat­ return home the latter part of thisweek. .Elder Scott officiating. Mrs. Hayes spent a part of last week spirit of the New York Reform Club. This in Riley. She is improving but little. urday and Sunday at Mr. Elmer Pratt’s League meeting Sunday night at the The “wee” young folks had a candy Victo *. May 27, 1895. debate of free silver is one of the features of Dr. McPherson went to Canada Mon ­ in Ionia city. usual hour. Subject—"The Appearance this number. For sale at Hunt's drug store. party at Mrs. McCullough Friday even ­ Mrs. Lida DeLapp went to Indiana day morning, his sister, Mrs. Rudell, Mr. L. Webster and wife visited in of Christ After the Resurrection: ” ing. Guess they had a nice time. last week. * 8HILOH ’S CURE is sold on a gua«* Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Newton Parker being Lansing a couple of days last week.'* Leader, Lena Wideman; Select Reading, The young people gave Miss Etta very ill. natee. It cures Incipient Consumption. May 17th, a son. Morris and Franklin Pierce, who have U. No- Jennie Wideman and Oliver Hyde. It is the best Cough Cure. Only one Moore a pleasant surprise last Tuesday Joseph Jorae returned home Satur­ had employment in Cleveland, Ohio, t A number of our townspeople went to cent a dose 25 cts., 50 eta., and $1. (3) evening. A very enjoyable time was D EW|T . day after an absence of about a year. for over a year, returned Monday, after St. Johns to witness the laying of the reported. An ice cream social at the Brick making a two week’s visit at home. DbWitt, Mny 27. 1895. corner stone of the new church. A To Teachers and Others. Decoration day was observed here The Universalist five cent mite social school house Friday evening netted Dr. McPherson and wife and Fred large crowd and fine time was reported, Sunday, the attendance being large. met at the beautiful home of Mrs. For the meeting of the National Edu­ seven dollars, which is to be used to Geller and wife, who spent the latter but some disappointment was expressed cational Association at Denver, Colo., The exercises were hi id at the cemetery Varney Pearce, in Olive, Wednesday purchase a flag. part of last week in Detroit, returned at tbe non appearance of Governor in July, next, the Western trunk lines although the weather was very disa ­ evening, May 22, where a very large have named a rate of one standard fare, While D. S. Stitchler was operating Saturday, excepting Mrs. McPherson Rich. greeable. Elders 8cott and Young and number were present, over eighty. plus two dollars for the round (trip. a stump puller, the horses started sud ­ who will remain a few days. Yesterday (Monday), the kind neigh­ They went from our village by the Variable routes will be permitted. Dr. Way delivered very appropriate denly, breaking a piece from the stump, Rev. Cormau ’s Memorial sermon at bors responded to the call of |Mr. Perry Special side trips at reduced rates will speeches. The male quartett did very wagon load. After disposing of the which Btruck him with such force as to M. E. church Sunday was highly ap­ Hewitt, ploughed, rolled, dragged, be arranged for from Denver to all the regular business, the remainder of the principal points of interest throughout nicely also. render him senseless. His face was preciated by a large congregation. There marked and planted eight acres of corn evening was spent with recitations by Colorado, and those desiring to extend badly fractured and one eye seriously were also a large audience.at Memorial for Mr. Heslin. There were eighteen WACOU8 TA. the little folks, select reading and music. the trip to California, Oregon, and injured. ______exercises in tbe evening. The Fowler teams and twenty-three men to do tbe Washington, will be accommodated at At the quarterly conference last week, The social then adjourned to meet in work. All fed and returned to their Cheap EicunloM to the west. cornet band, instrumental music by satisfactory rates. Teachers and others the M. E.church took preliminary steps four weeks at the home of J. W. Gunni ­ respective homes feeling they had per­ that desire, for intend attending this On May 21st and June 11th, The Messrs. Brunn and Krock, together with formed a duty we all should do for our meeting or of making a western trip to procure a resident minister for next North-Western Line (Chicago&North- son. Receipts of tbe evening $4.05. neighbors in affliction. the choir, readings, recitatiors and an A. E. D. this summer, will find this theiroppor ­ year, which begins about October 1st. western Railray) will sell excursion address, etc., were also appreciated. tunity. The Chicago, Milwaukee & 8t. Childrens' day will be observed June tickets at very low rates to a large ------• Mrs. T. S. Hawkins, Chattanorgm Paul Railway (first-class in every re­ 9th, in the M. E. church, with a concert number of points in the west and SHILOH'S CURE, tbe great Congh Tenn, says."Shiloh’s Vitalizer ’SAVED spect) will run through cars Chicago to northwest. For full information apply KARL’S CLOVER ROOT, the great and Croup Cure, is in great demand MY LIFE.’ I consider it the best by the children and young people. The Denver. For full particulars, write to to ticket agents of connecting lines or Blood purifier gives freshness and Pocket size contains twenty-five doses remedy for a debilitated I ever used. ” or call on Harry Mercer, M chigan program is something altogether new address W. H. Guerin, M. P. A., 67 clearness to the Complexion and cares only 25c. Children love it. Sold by For Dyspepsia, Liver or Kidney troub ’e Pass’r. Agent, 1101 Fouth Avenue, and unique. Wood word avenue, Detroit,Mich.; Constipation, 25 cts., 50 cts., $1.00 (1) druggists. (4) it excels. Price 75 cts (2) Detroit, Mich. 2-4. his hand with the most winsome smiles. He, poor man, is hale and hearty, like­ we all searched high and low, through The Governor’s Prerogatives. Then he drew back and pointed his fin­ ly to live out his years, but tho doc ­ the orchards, everywhere. The only ger at Adams, convulsing himself with tors say he is hopelessly mad. ” places mammy ever takes them to are “I know who you mean—the Tay­ Stuart’s and tho Taylor woods. I sent McCORMICK Bj ll'AEY T. EARLE. silent laughter. Tho crowd oould not lors, ” said Adams, and their talk drift ­ the men across lots to tho woods, and hold itself. It did not want to offend mammy’s gone to Stuart’s. I thought (Copyright, 1805, by tho Author.] the leading man of the community, but ed safely away from the governor, who in tho meantime was wandering down perhaps they might have come this way Governor Brown ’s prerogatives were it had to guffaw. Rayues and Mont ­ to meet you. ” Binders and Mowers. numerous and peculiar. Few governors gomery Stuart wero the only ones who the street, while the wholo town might kept their fares straight and went on hear that ho was on his way to a camp Tho wind was upon thorn. In tho could have exercised them without meeting then in progress in the next open space that lay betwoeu their gate great romoustranoe, but then few gov ­ talking. and the Taylor woods the unbroken We have the agency and are in position to Talk ernors would have cared to exercise Tho whistle of the inoomiug train town south. soon made a diversion. It came sweep­ Just os tho knot of people who had strength of the galo almost liftod them Prices on these machines which are conceded to them. As a usual thing, a governor, from the wagon. Standing up for a mo ­ however unscrupulous, bolds himself ing along as if it had forgotten to stop, been waiting for tho mail to bo distrib ­ then slowed up suddenly, and the peo ­ uted scattered from tho postofflee Adam? ment to look aronnd him, Adams saw above the temptations of a grocery store his gang of workmen reach tho edge of - - STAND AT THE HEAD - - and scorns ordering his neighbors to de ­ ple streamed out. A stranger would hurried iu. Mr. Hallam, in his privi­ havo thought thore was a surprising leged, elderly way, had delayed him aft­ the woods, pause a moment, listening prive themselves of their old clothes on to tho great roar through the trees, and his behalf. But if Governor Brown had number of arrivals for so small a place, er it was evident that tho mail was Of the list. Don ’t buy a binder or mower until but tho habitues of tho platform knew open, and now Adams was eager to be then to a man turn and run back through you have seen us. We will be pleased to ex­ weaknesses to which other governors are the open toward the farm. He shouted not prone ho was also exempt from that half theso pooplo had merely step­ getting home, for tho afternoon was plain the features and show up the machines ped off the train to hear the govornor wearing late, and there wero clouds fiercely at them, but the wind took the many failings common to men of pow­ words from his month. er. Ho was not given to wire pulling or pray. Some traveling man had thrown gathering. He must stir his tomato whether you expect to purchase or not. The him a coin already, and ho had fallen piokors to get over tho field as fast as A moment more, and Adams was in nepotism or bribery, and tho preroga ­ the loo of the woods himself. He reined old established reputation of The McCormicks is tives ho clung to were freely granted on his kncoa, lifting his long bony possible, for fear the 6torm would catch alone a guarantee of their excellence. him by his people. hands and bis resonant voice to beaten. him with ripe tomatoes on the vines. in his horse. In the apparent lull made Freely granted? Indeed they were, “What’s ho saying? ” asked a man Tho talkative postmaster seemed to have by the shelter it was possible to think froely and smilingly granted, by all of who had never seen the governor before. been lying in wait for him, however. in spite of the turmoil among the We have a full The kind tho old inhabitants of Newton and its “Ask him when he’s dono, ” said the “Heard tho joke on Brother Parish?” branches. Husband and wife looked supply of that is used. vicinity. But thero was ouo man who man who had tossed tho coin. he asked. into each other’s eyes despairingly. BINDER TWINE questioned them—a bustling northern “It sounds like mighty earnest pray­ "No, ” said Adams brusquely. Only a miracle could guide them to man, who, after marrying a southern ing, but I can’t make out a word of it “Well, ” said tho postmaster in tho their children through this wild storm, Extras for Repairs on Hand and Ordered. girl in tho north and bringing her back oxcept a‘Lord ’ now and then, ” said exasperating tono of ono who settles to in which they oould hardly catch the to her old home, had awakened tho tho now man, turning to somo ouo else. leisurely enjoyment of his own story, sound of their own voices. Yet they wholo county to stirring activity, mak­ “Can anybody understand him?” “well, you know Brother Parish—only must search. M. L. Kenyon, R. M. SWIGART, ing it a banner county of the now south “Nobody unless it’s tho Lord, ’’re­ being stationed hero last year—don ’t They jumned to the ground, bnt be­ Local Agent. State Agent as it had been of tho old. This man sponded the other. “But don ’t worry know the governor ’s ways very well foro they could enter the woods a could not understand tho way in which about what he’s saying. Hear him and and don ’t like him, bnt he don ’t want strango rumbling, grinding sound rose Office at Kenyon’s Feed Birn, Clinton avenue anl Railroad Street. tho governor ’s habits were tolerated. watch him, won ’t you? It’s tho best to show it, so ho’s always trying to above tho roar of thrashing branches If ho bad had his way—but fortunately nickel show you ’ll ever get, and don ’t joke with him. Bless you, tho old gov- and creaking treo trunks. The now even ho could not go so far as that—if you forget it when ho passes tho hat. ” sound grew louder and moro dreadful ho had been town marshal, for instance, Tho old man ’s face worked with ex­ until Adams and his wife clung close tho governor would have been arrested citement. His voice rose entroatiugly to each other in fear, while the fright­ somo day and put into any sort of cus­ and fell to intonations of remorse, ened horse wheeled suddenly, leaped tody where his various prerogatives whilo his long hands reached farther freo from tho harness and wagon and Atlas Soap would have been but a memory and a and farther upward, grasping wildly at plunged wildly hack over the road to ­ tho air, ns if ho would seize tho very ward homo. Then not a hundred feet CLEANS RAPIDLY, desire. from where tho man and woman stood “Thero is a point where patience garments of Deity. THOROUGHLY, “All aboard! ” shouted tho conductor tho solid ranks of tho forest broko apart, coases to bo a virtue,” Mr. Adams was gave way before a whirling blast of heard to say, “and I think this town after the long pauso in which several ECONOMICALLY. truckloads of fruit had been passed into dust, broken branches and uprooted Mj Itcst for General Laundry and Family Washing. Ask you has long passed that point in its treat­ trees. They watched it march across ment of that crazy old darky, Brown. tho express car. Grocer lor ATLAS, and Take No Other. “Amen! Amen! Amen!” cried tho tho fields, dropping part of its burden BEAUTIFUL PICTURES GIVEN FOIt WRAPPERS. No wonder your negroes arc incapable as it went, only to gather up new vic­ and trifling when you all join in encour ­ govornor, leaping to liis feet. Then, PASSOLT, with smiles and genuflections, ho pre­ tims in its terrific arms. HENRY Manufacturer, SAGINAW. MICH. 89 aging vagabondism and petty thieving With blanched faces and nnmb hearts in such a way. I can ’t understand it. sented his tattered cap to all who had not prudently retreated. the two watchers hastened toward the Why, even my wife, one of tho most gap in tho forest to look down tho track sensible women I know, used to take “Now ’s your chance,” tho man who my trousers beforo they were half worn had given tho first money said to tho of the cyclone. It was as if somo gigan ­ FRUIT GROWERS AND SMALL FARMERS new man. “Ask him what ho prayed tic scythe had mown a path through tho Homes and Living for Thousand*. out and give them to tho governor. woods to tho open fields beyond. Tho What’s worse, ouco I caught her hang­ about. ” Read what western papers and fruit ing a pair over tho back garden fence, “I couldn ’t inako ont quite all you “Don't come a step farther in this direc­ space was a littlo wider than a city where they would bo handy for him to said, uncle, ” said tho questioner, drop ­ tion,governor. ” street, but in it scarcely tho semblance raisers say about a special number of sms steal. I’ve had to put a stop altogether ping a cliino in tho cap. “What wero ernor knows tho difference as well as of a tree was left erect. the Great Northern Bulletin, devoted to his loating round our place. ” you praying for? ” you or me. Well, just now Brother Down this wild road tho father and to the fruit business in the Facific “You seem to forget that your wife’s “Praying to save you from tho witch­ Parish lio met tho old governor singing mother started, peering under logs, northwest: es and tho devil, ” answered tho old about going to the Gilman camp meet­ clambering through treo tops, calling father used to own him,” said Raynes, and listening with strained ears. “Contains a multitude of interesting tho express agent. man glibly. The gratified auditors, who ing, an lio says to him: ‘How ’s this, and valuable articles, notes and bints, “I don ’t seo what differeuco that had been expecting this explanation, governor, going to a Methodist camp “Amen! Amen! Amon! ” Tho words presented by a close student and invest ­ makes, ” Adams said. gave a shout of laughter, in which tho meeting? I thought you turned Bap­ reached them faintly. “Get back, dev­ igator. ’’—Daily Spokesman Review, Spo ­ “No, I supposo you don ’t, but your questioner joined as he hurried into tho tist last week. ’ Tho old governor just il! Get back, devil! Amen! Amen!” kane, Wash. wifo does, ” retorted Raynes. "Hero tho train. says, ‘ScoMarso Mont Stuart over thero until tho old governor leaped out from -“The best thing of the kind that has old fellow comes now, ” ho added, “on As the crowd dispersed, Adams found across the road? ’ An when Brother the woods into the highroad of the yet been published * * * The future time for tho 4 o ’clock train. Don ’t you himself standing by Mr. Hallam, the Parish said yes ho says, ‘Marse Mont 6torm. There was a screaming of shrill of the fruit business is brought out Stuart got rich tending to his own bus­ child voices and yelping of distracted strongly without exaggeration.” —Rural know, Adams, that more people remem­ old Baptist minister, who had beou Northwest, Portland, Ore. ber Newton for the governor ’s prayers listening in quiet amusement to the iness, an that’s wliat I’m a-doing. ’ dogs, but above it all, above even the Some of the boys heard it an come governor ’s shouts and the rustling cf “The Fruit Bulletin is a storehouse than they do for your big shipments of governor ’s prayer. Adams looked at of facta interesting to our growers. It is beans and tomatoes? ” him in surprise. right up to tell. It’s pretty hard to got the wind, there came a fierce howl as ahead of the old man, ain ’t it?” another figure burst through the under ­ also calculated to show eastern people “What’s that he’s singing? ” Adams “You here, Mr. Hallam?” he said. brush closo in tho governor ’s track. that the Pacific Northwest is ‘strictly in asked, with a frown, ignoring the “Yes. Why not? ” the old man ask­ “He’s an old nuisance, ” said Adams, it’ as a producer of staple fruits.”—J. B. agent ’s question. ed, comprehending perfectly the re­ laughing slightly, bnt feeling more than “Miss Hallie’s children 1 Miss Hallie's Holt, Manager Snake River Fruit Asso ­ ever that Newton was unpleasantly as children 1 Got ’em safe, Miss Hallio 1 A noticeably tall, lank negro was proach which Adams did not express. Got ’em safo, Miss Hallie 1 Amenl O ciation, Wawawai, Wash. coming down the street. The long win­ “It’s a good thing once in awhile to well as dangerously dominated by Gov­ “Most artistically printed and con­ ter overcoat ho woro would havo been see oneself as others see one. I’ve ernor Brown. Lord, amen!” the old man shouted as tains more horticultural matter relating too warm for tho sultry June weather been told that tho governor takes me On his way homo, to add to bis vex­ he rushed aloug the mad course before to the northwest than we have ever be­ had it not been torn and battered till for his model, bnt I tell Brother Parish ation, Adams camo across the governor fore seen in one publication.” — Pacific the breezo ventilated it and fluttered its I’m sure the old fellow has more the again. How tho old man could havo Farmer, Portland, Ore. fragments like streamers, much to the Methodist style. ” got so far north of town when ho “I am delighted with the Bulletin delight of tho four yelping dogs that Adams shook his shoulders impatient­ had lately heard his voice resounding I do not think I ever saw anything more capered around him, led by short ly. “Well, ” he said, “if you ministers so far down the south road was hard to comprehensive on the fruit business. 3 ounces BEST TOBACCO I0CWB strings. These wero the governor ’s body ­ don ’t mind being taken off liko that, I understand. But it was useless to try My belief that the country out here is PIPETCOUPONS IN EACH PACKAGE to explain tho governor ’s presence in the best part of the Union for home- guard, and ho was seldom seen without snpposo it would bo officious for any seekers is stronger than ever.”—H. H. them. Tho remains of a fur cap did its ono to interfere in your behalf. ” one place or another. Ho knew all the Spalding, Treasurer State Board of Hort ­ best to cover his gray wool, while what “You ’ve adopted our ways and con ­ short cuts and byways, and his long iculture, Almota, Wash. ho would have called his shoes made no verted ns to yours until there’s not legs carried him so swiftly over the “Should be in the bands of every fruit pretense of covering his faded looking much difference left between us,” Mr. ground that sometimes his guard of raiser in the Pacific Northwest. * * * FRED. F. MURDOCK, feet. Ho was singing at the top of his Hallam said, with a soothing langh. dogs despaired and submitted to be Shows in an interesting way just what voico, but tho barking of his dogs made “Bnt there’s ono thing that marks you dragged, fore logs in air, rather than to what our country offers to fruit growers St. Johns, Mich., follow him at such a steady trot. Peo­ and men who believe in small farms it difficult to understand the words. for a northerner yet, Mr. Adams, and -DEALER IN- Perhaps he realized this, for when ho that is tho way you call our darkies to ple said that lio brought news from tho well tilled. ”—Northwest Horticulturist, neighboring villages quicker than the Tacoma, Wash. saw Mr. Adams in the group at tho sta­ account as if they wero white men. “There is not a topic likelv to be of ALL KLNDS OF tion he gave his followers a cuff that You ’ll loam iu time that tho best of telegraph could. interest or value to the inquirer that is admonished them in silence. them aro not exactly responsible. As “Storm a-comin! Storm a-comin! overlooked. * * * A most complete “Miss Hallio Howard! Miss Hallio for tho old governor, he has been crazy Wild man loose! Wild man loose!" and attractive compendium of the horti­ Howard! Lives on pound cakel Lives for years. ’ ’ was tho refrain ho shouted as Adams cultural interests of the west.”—Daily on pound cake! Goin to heaven!” his “Yon say they aro not responsible, passed. Adams, noticing nn unusual Oregonian, Portland, Ore. MARBLE & stentorian voico rang out. and yet you trust even tho crazy ones eagerness in his manner, thought that "He was kneeling on his breast, Qlvlng This valuable publication will be sent “Goodnews foryoH, Adams, ” laugh­ at large. ” the coming storm was exciting him thanks to the Lord.” to any address, together with “Facts ed Montgomery Stuart, tho next largest “Tho governor is perfectly harmless, dangerously and reined in his horse to him, deftly slipping under and past the About a Great Country, ” containing say: large map, for four cents in postage, by truck farmer to Adams, as he drove and iu a certain way wo aro fond of obstructing branches and dodging from F. I. Wnitney, G. P. & T. A., Great up. “The governor must have broken him. Can ’t you eeo that as long as we “Don ’t come a etep farther in this the grasp of the man behind, who was GRANITE Northern Railway, St. Paul. Minn. have him al>out we aro all of us kings, direction, governor. You know I’ll plunging straight through the jungle of with him for fool? We don ’t mind if have you looked up if ever I catch you roots and limbs, his garments shredded It'** Grand Success. our dignity snffers a little. The old fel­ on my farm, and I’m going to be on from him and his flesh torn. The fact has been demostrated by the CEMETERY WORK. low is heahby for us. He is shrewd the watch. Turn back, I tail you. ” On they came—the madman always thousands of testimonials the Mayers enough to hit all our weaknesses.” Adams ’ horse was a good one, and within reach of the governor, always Drug Company, of Oakland, Md., has “It’s very pleasant and.kind t® take Adams pat it to its beet pace, yet they eluded by him—crawling under uplifted received since it has sent its famous Cot Stone for Boilon Purposes. did not gain very foal on the governor, roots, vaulting over tree tranks, tearing Mayers Magnetic Catarrh Cure ont to that forbearing view of l&m,” Adams the sufferers of catarrh. No medicine said, “but I feel that the community who, hieteod of burning baok, was press­ aside tho lowered curtains of vines, baa received such an endorsement from Opposite Postofflee. will regret its oourse some day. He is ing forward almost at a run. while far in the rear the governor ’s dogs the people in so shorts time as it did. untrustworthy, and ha’s likely at any “Storm a-oomln! Storm a-comin! ” whined piteously behind some barrier The makers sell the medicine on busi­ timo to make trouble either by 'Unex­ Adams kept hearing, and then more they oould not soale. ness principles, and a patient is not re­ pected violence or by pure laek of sense. faintly: “Wild man loose! Wild man “Got ’em safe, Miss Hallie! Got ’em quired to buy the medicine by the dozen Mrs. Adams thinks I’m hard hearted not loo —ooeeF ” until at last a hill rose be­ safe, Miss Hallie I” the governor kept to get a care. The Mayers’ Magnetic FARMS AND HOMES to let him hang round our piece any hind him and shot out the sound. shouting, but where he had them the Catarrh Cure sella for $1 a bottle, one -IN- more sinoe we’ve bad tho children, but The storm Whs coming fast The parents did not know until the old man bottle to last for a three months’ treat­ I tell you I don ’t daro to have him with wholo sky was overcast, bat full of bounded np to them, unbuttoned his ment. 3 bottles is the highest record ARKANSAS TEXAS AND PECOS dazzling diffused light Under its ever required to complete a cure. Gen­ thorn, and my mind ’s not easy while long ooat, dropped the children in their eral catarrh one bottle is guaranteed. VALLEY. he’s at large. I qpppose I take him strange DfigtitnqiM the trees and grass, arms and faoed bis pursuer, beating No cure no pay. more seriously than other people the green crops in the fields and even him off with the great shattered branch Thia is an unequalled offer and if you because he’s so devoted to my family. the brown earth aeomed bo shine with a of a tree. Then hack they turned, the are a sufferer from catarrh get a bottle “I don ’t think you havo cause to, ” yellowish luster of their own. Behind governor in chase, and when Adams from your druggist, if no benefit derived Then he drew back. said the minister. “Even if the govern ­ a broad stretch of forest that bordered looked up from his babies they were it costa you nothing. A prominent R. quarantine and been at your house or were to grow violent—though ho one side of the road the clouds wore vanishing far down the narrow swath R. conductor speaks: Cumberland , Md ., April 20th, 1803. again. You might as well give up. You never will—he would not hurt a hair gathering more densely, and one of of the cyclone. To The Mayers Drug Co., caj)’t keep him away from Mifcs Hallie. ” on your wife’s head or touch tho chil­ them which showed above the tree tops “I’ve never got it out of him yet,” Gentlemen :—Yours to hand, in reply wil say that I have the greatest regard for your '.‘Miss Hallie Howard! Miss Hallie dren. He would die like a dog for any was tho only dark thing in the florid. Adams often says. ”Ho won ’t tell how Catarrh Remedy, my trouble Is In a chronic Howard 1 Got a bad husband 1 Got a of your father-in law’s people. I don ’t A moment after it first came in sight it be knew that Taylor had escaped from form and expect to use more than one bottle. FARMING, GRAZING, I used one bottle which removed the trouble bad husband!” tho governor kept on as bcliovo he would ever hf.ve gone crazy was moving fast up the sky—a broad his keeper or that my children were in from my head In good shape and am on the FRUIT, TiMBEREO he Was passing by the group. if the family had not broken np at the sinistor bar of indigo, bordered with a the woods. All he’ll say is that it was second lx>ttle for throat trouble, If I should succeed in the latter as I did in the former I “You ’re going to wait and pray for old gentleman ’s death. After Miss Hal­ lashing fringe of white. Taylor ’s woods, and he knew Taylor shall write you again in the near future- Hop ­ AND MINER! LAND. the traveling men, aren ’t you, govern­ lie wont north, sir, ho just crawled into Adams leaned forward, urging his wouldn ’t want any stray children therei ing it will do for the suffering humanity what or? ” Raynes called out. his cnbin and grieved himself daft. His horse into a run. The first gust of the I never heard any prayer that lifted me it did for me, I remain JJ SCHkftjTZ. Tho old aoan halted. heart would have brokbn if his mind wind rushed past him as he sprang so straight to heaven as the governor ’s Sold and positively guaranteed by Fildew “Bishop! Bishop! Bishop Brown! ” had not. ” Mr. Hallam checked him­ down at his own gate, but he scarcely did when I caught up to him. He had Sc Millman, druggists. St. Johns and Fowler. Sold In tracts to suit Purchasers he announced in deep staccato. "Not self suddenly. Ho was growing warm, felt it, for there, running down the that wild man down, and was kneeling 4-4 MILD CLIMATE, Variety of governor! Bishop! Bishop Brown 1” He and be remembered that he had said all road through his orchard, camo his wife on his breast, giving thanks to the KARL’8 CLOVER ROOT will purify Products LOW PRICES. glanced around to note the effect of this this before. It hod done no good, to be screaming something he could not un ­ Lord.” your blood, clear your complection Low interest, Easy statement on the crowd. Every one was sure. Yet he felt that Adams was a derstand. "What did he say, Adams? ” Raynes, regulate your Bowels and make yonr TERMS, smiling except Mr. Adams, “Miss Hal- kindly, well meaning man, whom it “The children! Tho children!” he the express agent, likes to ask. head clear as a bell. 25c., 50c., and lie’s” bad hnsbaud, who looked annoy­ would be useless to offend, since, aftor heard as he hurried to meet her. “We’ve “If you don ’t know what the govern­ $1.00. ^5) ed and affected not to see tho old man, all, ho could not be expected to under ­ searched the whole place. Come back or says when he prays, I can’t tell you, ” whereupon the now made bishop ad ­ stand. to the Taylor woods! ” Adams answers, “but it means enough BUY OF TH E FACTORY. vanced with a series of low bows and “It is queer, isn ’t it, ” the minister Adams turned his horse and liftod his to Miss Hallie and mo for us to have W« make the wife into tho wagon. the old man pray for us regularly onoe held out his band to Mr. Adams in resumed, “that tho body stands a broken Clifford Piaooand g/ooting. mind so much better than a broken “How long ago? ” ho asked between a day. Miss Hallie spoke once of omit ­ Maps and Circulars free. Address his teeth. ting it when wo had some northern flUftlArfearOrfsi “Take it and get rid of him,” whis­ heart? A sad illustration of that came Write and see what they pered Raynes good naturedly. to mo the other day. I was called to see “I don ’t know how long. I thought friends visiting us, but I told her that tell for at the Factory. H. D. ARMSTRONG, But Adams was angry and obstinate ­ a dying woman. She was dying of Mammy Jane had them, and she to act as our ohaplain was one of the Illustrated Catalogue free ly looked tho other way. Tho old negro heartbreak, nothing else, and it was thought they were with me. When we governor ’s prerogatives. ” Whs Ann Arbor Organ Co., Trav. Past. Ajft. "Iron Mountain continued for a few moments to offer because her husband bad gone insane. missed them, we called the men, and THR END. Ann Arbor, Mich. Route,” Jackson, Michigan, The Republican. MM^[aSiM@ifeiiSi>a iaBlB!5gfc)i!Ei| A. E. Dutoher—Shoe Dealer WEDNESDAY, MAY 29.

The people who have been arguing ARE YOU POSTED thatan ounce of silver will buy a bushel HE Royal Baking Powder is the of wheat, and therefore that silver has On the prices and proper styles in footwear ? If not, not depredated, will have to revise their figures if the present bulge in the purest and strongest baking pow­ you can get all needed information at Dutcher’s, See wheat market contains. It takes an our Jnew and distinctive styles in Ladies ’ Low Shoes. ounce and a half of silver to buy a der made. It has received the highest I he Romeo, the Columbia and two button strap Oxford. bushel of wheat now. T

Tub supreme court of the United award at the U. S. Gov’t official inves­ States has affirmed the decision of the lower court sentencing Eugene V. Debs, tigation, and at all the Great Inter­ leader of the great railroad strike of last year, to prison. Debs interfered with Uncle Sam’s mails, and disobeyed the f national Expositionsand World’s Fairs i jDjwctjon of the court. This decision is right, and trill bp of vast importance wherever exhibited in competition with ip restraining o{h«Fi front flQtaoflaw. Jeifnwfc others. The bill restoring capital punishment Men’s Fine Shoes from $1.35 to $5.00 for murder, which passed the senate last week, failed to pass in the house Mon- It the finest, lightest, sweetest, “ Work Shoes 11 1.00 to 2.75 Iiig ’ui Pn a tje vot ?‘ Murders at the Ladies’ Oxfords from 75c io $3.50 rate of one tvto a day will probably most wholesome bread, cake and pastry. in Michigan until the weak Ladies’ Fine Shoes from $1.25 to $4.00 sentimentalism that seems to control More economical than any other leaven­ We want your shoe trade. You want to trade with us for we our legislatures la in some way ovo»\ are in a position to save you money. come. Every man who voted k^dlnst that measure should bo held to strict ing agent. account by his constituency, We are pleased to note that Itepresentative ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. Red fern worked for the passage of the DUTCHER’S CASH SHOE HOUSE. bill. -...... • ~ - . . 1 1"P1 2 H. L. Kendrick—Dry Goods Card pets anCloaks. Now comes Secretary Carlisle and lormea, ana witn it tiresnam at once al­ rrom any subsequent utterance of his furnishes a definition of ‘ sound money ” GRESHAM IS NO MORE. lied himself. In the law Gresham had that he ever changed his view as origin ­ which ought to, and will, disabuse gained a good reputation as a careful, ally announced as to the justico of the painstaking lawyer. With the first shriek action he had proposed. Whilo he was every intelligent mind of all doubt as to PATRIOT, SOLDIER, STATESMAN AND of war alarm Governor Morton appointed deep In the Hawaiian negotiations Gresh­ precisely what he means: JURIST CALLED HENCE. him lieutenant colonel of the Thirty- am wus obliged suddenly to give Imme­ I am, therefore, in favor of the pre­ eighth Indiana, but before he saw activo diate attention to tho Bering sea seal servation of the existing standard of service ho was appointed colonel of the fisheries. Tho arbitration arranged by After Weeks of Illness the Leo **etary ol Fifty-third, in December, 1801. Gresh­ Still In The Lead! value with such use of full legal tender his predecessor was in full swing. Hero silver coins, and paper convertible into State Succumbs to the AesaJilt of the am’s regiment was ordered to join Grant was another matter with which ho wus coin on demand, as can be maintained Grim Tutor — Another Citizen Who after Donaldson. Aug. 11, 1863, he was not in harmony. without impairing or endangering the Slade a Distinguished Mark «n Ills Coun ­ appointed brigadier general on tho recom ­ He did not believe that the arbitration mendation of Grant and Sherman and credit of the government or diminish­ try’s History, Doth in War iuu I Peace, would be successful In tho object aimed placed in command of the Natchez di ­ at by tho United States—namely, the pro ­ ing the purchasing or debt paying Washington , M; ,680,694 in half a year, for at 1:15 this morning he passed away publican nomination for the presidency nt the United States withdraw. Full line of Brussells, Moquetts, and Axministers. We are but if the increase for the two months the Chicago convention. His liberal views His good offices In tho Chlno-Japati war to his eternal rest. on the tariff created against him the an ­ had no little effect in hastening tho peace only of January and February, after the Was Conscious Just llefore the End. tagonism of the extreme protectionists at that has been proclaimed. Ho was equally agents for the celebrated Johnson Wool Parquetry Flooring woolen schedule came into effect be During tho last hours of his life tho sec­ Chicago. successful in averting war between Guate­ for borders, etc. taken, the increase was $8,410,959 for retary’s wife, who had been devoted In During his short term ns postmaster mala nnd Mexico. In the case of the those two months, or at the rate of oyer goneral Gresham accomplished much. cluim of United States citizens against her attention to him all through his ill­ Letter postage to Canada was reduced Venezuela Gresham secured the judicial Respectfully, $.50,000,000 a year. The foregoing figures ness, sat beside his bed rending from the and the postal convention with Mexico annunciation of the principle that a gov ­ would be bad enough, but the actual Bible the passages ho loved to hear. Ho was signed. Another important service ernment is responsible for injury done to effects of free wool are far worse. was conscious until just before the end, ho rendered to tho country was tho ro- foreigners by insurgents. Gresham had Bstablishment of the fast malls. As sec­ also to consider tho Bluefields matter, in spoke bravely and confidently of tho great retary of state in the present administra ­ which he obtulncd from Groat Britain a ohnnge he knew was coming and words ot For Land and Uomeseekers. tion Gresham had como to deal with per­ disclaimer that she had uny wrong pur­ H. L. KENDRICK. Half fare excursions south on May hope and cheer to his stricken loved ones. haps more vexatious, Intricate and deli ­ pose in her action there. It is clear in Thus he lay until just before 1:15, the cate diplomatic affuirs than had fallen to fact that his studies of the numerous dip ­ 21st and June lllh, 1895. The Mobile the share of most secretaries of state. His lomatic questions he had to handle was ints along its line in the states of seemed to fall upon him and —tho end the man. slender —In youth remarkably so —six feet ississippi and 8outh Alabama with S had come. __ __ Perhaps from his long judicial experi­ tall, his black beard and hair turned to stpp-over privileges. ence ho was disposed to view every ques­ an iron gray. His eyes wore hazel, full 'For tickets apply to any railroad SKETCH OF A M’LEXDII» CAREER. tion from tho standpoint of exact and and large, with tho power “to threaten CASH GROCERY, ticket agent or to F. W. Greene, General equal justice. To him It mode little dif ­ and command, ’’ but soft and amiable in Agent, 108 N. Broadway, St. Louis Mo. Jurist, statesman and Soldier, and Diatlo. ference how any line of action promised familiar conversation. His voice was E. E. Posky , guished In All Field*. to affect his own country; he could and pleasing and consorted well with his hab­ General Passenger Agent. Walter Qulntln Gresham was a soldier, did disabuso his mind of any personal itual demeanor, which was 'quiet and a judge and a statesman, eminent and feeling In dealing with an International modest. As a inan he was kind, generous SATURDAY, JUNE 1st. and frank. He was social and approach­ Zoa Pbora brings health and happiness distinguished in these three fields of question, and the first consideration with him was Always absolute fairness; if his able. It was In his home life that he was Every woman should learn about Zoa human endeavor. He rose to tho rank of own country occupied a false position in most to be admired, in 1858 he married Phora. major general of volunteers during the the matter he thought it was his duty to Matilda, the daughter of Thomas Me- rebellion. He was for fourteen years set it right, even at a sacrifice of material Grain, a man of Scotch-Irish descent. in* m sound Money ” Convention. 1 pail family white fish for ...... 50c United States circuit judge for Illinois, interests as it might appear at the time. No Orders for ‘Goal. 51b Gloss starch______25c Memphis, May 24. —The “sound money ” and held three cabinet portfolios —post ­ Secretary Gresham found much to dis ­ 3 pounds fancy prunes ...... 25c Paka , Ills., May 28 —Tho Penwoll and 4 Jbs corn starch...... 25c convention was a success, considered In master general and secretary of the treas­ satisfy him with the state of our foreign 2 good brooms...... 25c relations when he assumed office the last Sprlngslde collieries, employing hundreds 5 lbs ginger snaps...... 25c both Its aspects—numbers or enthusiasm. ury under Arthur and socretary of state of miners, have shot down owing to no 2 lbs best tea dust ...... 25c 4 cans of corn...... 25c There were 8,000 people In the hall when under Cleveland. Greshain came from time, and In his characteristic fashion he orders for ooaL it was called to order, and It was full bo set to work to shape these to meet his own 12 boxes parlor matches...... 12c 3 cans tomatoes ...... 25c English stock. His ancestors moved tc ideas without delay. Such a course was fore the organization had been effected. Virginia and later to Harrison county, 8 lbs rolled oats ...... 26c 3 cans peas...... ,....25c certain to subject hlin to bitter criticism, A T> T 1 • TV 1 lb matchless baking powder, warran­ Representative Catchlngs was permanent Ind., where ho was born on St. Patricks and he fully realized this In advance, burt B/:^009B 1 gal can apples...... 25c chairman and all the speeohes were anti day, 1882. In 1833, Gresham’s father was was in no respect deterred from daring ted ...... 10c sliver mono-metalllsra, and generally elected sheriff und the next year was mur­ what be thought was right. This brought characterized the silver movement as a dered by a noted desperado whom he had him face to face with the great question “craze” that like a prairie fire would gone to arrest. of the hour at that time, the annexation soon burn Itself out. His mother was loft a widow with five of Hawaii. Carlisle was the principal speaker of small children. Walter Q. was but 2 He had decided views upon this mattcT Instructor of Music Remember we carry the largest stock of Canned the day. ______years of nge when his father was killed. even before ho came into the cabinet, and Walter grow up with but two or three Call tor a Silver Convention. It was upon his recommendation that GUITAR, Goods in St. Johns, and are sold at rock bottom winters' schooling until he was 16 years Cleveland performed almost his first of ­ MANDOLIN, Memphis, May 27 —The Contral Blme of age. By dint of hard work and the prices. Don ’t forget that we are headquarters ficial action by withdrawing from the VIOLIN talllc League of Memphis, has Issued assistance of his brother he succeeded In senate, where It was pending, the annex ­ an address to the people calling a entering tho seminary at Corydon, Ind. ation treaty negotiated by Secretary Fos ­ AND BANJO for the Best Teas and Coffees, try them and convention of silver men to meet here Two years there and one at Bloomington ter. Then Blount was sent to the Island June 12 and 18, and urging every city, university completed his education so far Republic to make an original Investiga ­ you will will use no others. as schooling was concerned. He began tion, and upon his report tho secretary Arrangements of music a specialty. NO town and community to send delegates, the study of law under Judge W. A. Yours truly, the object of the convention being to made his now celebrated recommendation CHARGE for Mandolin Club Rehearsals. Porter, one of the noted characters of that the queen be restored, inasmuch as formulate a deflnlto plan of action and southern Indiana, while acting as deputy ----- TERMS:— “give direction to the overwhelming vol she had been deposed by the action of the clerk, and In 1854 entered into partner­ officers of the United States. 50 cents per Lesson ; Headquarters at S. A. urae of public sentiment favoring a return ship with Thomas C. Slaughter, an emi­ CHICK & DuBOISE. When congress finally made known Its SIM’-RGIS’ Music Store, St. John*; Michigan to our own, and the establishment of nent lawyer of that time and afterward our Independenoe of alien financial views the secretary accepted them for his Machine A Organ Co., Owosso. Address, judge of the circuit oourt. government, but it cannot bo dtscovermt ,T D,w

\ OH1TUAUY. Legal. Legal. Legal. Legal ortgage sale ^default having The Republican. Isaac Eaegle, of Greenbush, died at OlicE OF I.EITIN(jT»KA1N CONTRACT.— ortgage hale —default having N Notice Is hereby given ‘I** 1 L WM. M been made Iu the conditions of a certain been made In the conditions of a certain TEACHER’S EXAMINATIONS his home May 24th, aged 80 years. He Atkinson, township drain commissioner of the mortgage, dated Juue 25, 1889, executed by Polly mortgageM dated, April 7lb, 1893, executed by John township of Bingham. county of Clinton, state of Ann Davis to Samuel 8. W a i k»r and Edwin L J. Cone and Esther B. Cone, bis wife to Chailrs G For 1SD4-95. WEDNESDA M i P. was not afflicted with any particular Michtiran. will, on the 8»>tH f>AV OF MAY White and recoidd in liber 71 or mortgages on Hathaway and record'd April 8,1893, in Litter 71 disease, but was just worn out. He A. It. IHVi, al the bridge north of Henry Irf* ’sin ►aid page 124, in the office of the register of deeds for of m •rtgages on page 278 In the nffit-H of the Regis Regular examination' at St. Johns, Thursday townahtunf Bingham, at ten o ’clock in the forenoon tbe Couuty of Clinton and Stale ol Michigan and ter of Deeds for the County of Clinton state ol and Friday August 2d and Hid. leaves five sons and one daughter — ot that d*y, proceed to receive bida fur the clean­ which mortgage was duly assigned by Samuel 8. Michigan, on wbicb mortgage there is due at tbe ■ Special examinations, St. Johns Friday, Aug. FROM MONTANA. ing deepening. widening and straightening Walker and Marta E Walla to Mary W. Lawton date of this notice tbe sum of $12.25 for past due 24i b, DeWItt Friday, Sept. 28th, David L., John L, Wm. L., Abram, and of a certain dialn known and designat'd as July 6,1889, and which assignment was recorded luteresl, and the further aunt of {350.00 principal DeWiit, Friday and Saiurday , March 8 and 9,1895. Interesting Letter From 8. P. Kenlllelil, • Bad Creek Drain”, localeJ and established in said in liber 71 of iiiorig'gea on page 461 in the said and the interest thereon at the rate of seven per H . Johns, Thursday and Friday, March 28 and Isaac N. Eaegle, all ofGreenbush, except register of deed ’s office, on which mortgage there cent, since October 7, 1894. and it being expressly 29. 1895. of Hen I* Hi. Township of Bingham, and described aa follows, William, who lives in Cadillac, and to-wit : Ou sections 2*, 29 end 30. is due at the date nl ibis untire $54;.82, besides an ptovided by tbe terms of said mortgage that should Ovid; Friday, April 26,1896. Said Job a ill be let by auctions. The section st attorney lee of $1A.U0 provided tu said mortgage any default be made in the payment of said In­ At the regular examinations, examinations wilt Canyon Ferry , Montana May 31,1805. Mary Eaegle, also of Greenbush. All the millet of the Drain will be let first, and the re­ and by ata’utc; aud no auit or proceeding at law nr terest or any part thereof on any day whereon the begin at 9 o ’clock A. M. Special examinations will Editor Republican .—As there are a maining sections In iht-ir order up stream, tu sc- iu equity having lieeti instituted to recover any same is made payable as expressed io said mort ­ begin at 8 o ’clock a . M. By order of ilie Board of were present at the funeral Sunday at cordate with the diagiam now on file with the part of the dpbt secured by said mortgage; n»w gage, with a further proviso that should tbe same examiners. K. M. WINSTON, good many friends in Clinton county the Evangelical church, Rov. Henry, of other papers pertaining to aai.i drain, in the otlice therefore by virtu* of the power of aale iu said remain unpaid and in arrears for tbe space ol Commissioner of schools. of the Township C lerk. to which reference may he mortgage contained aud by statute iu such case thirty days, then sod from thenceforth, that ta to that I have promised to write to, I the Christian church preaching the bad by all parties interested, and hid* will tie made made and provided, notice Is hereby given that on «ay, alter the lapse of the said thirty davs, the thought if you would kindly allow a sermon and the sons acting as pall and received acco diogly. Contracts will he made SATURDAY THE 6tii DAY OF IULY, 1895. at aforesaid principal sum of {350 00, with all ortgage sale —notice is hereby with the lowest responsible bidder giving adequate one o ’clock in tbe afternoon at the west frout door arrearage of interest, shall at the option of the given that default has been tnado in tbe little space in your paper, I would avail bearers. secur.ty tor the perlormauce ol the work, iu a sunt olthe court house for Clinton county, Mtcbigao, mortgagee become and be due and payable im­ uaymeutM ot the sums of money seeured .‘to lie paid myself of that opportunity of letting then and there to l>e fixed by me. reserving to my- in the Village ot St Johns, in said county, there mediately thereafter; and more than thirty days by a certain mortgage made and executed by Deceased was born in Morristown, aelf the right to reject any and all bids. The date will hetold at public vendue lo the hlgheai bidder having elapsed since tbe interest became due, the Jesse S, Cahoon aud Barbara Cahoou, bis wife, and them hear from me. My wife and I New Jersey, in 1800. He was married for thecompletion of such contract . and the terms the land in said mortgage described, namely: All said mortgagee hereby elects to treat said princi­ Caroline Cahoon, as mortgagors, lo The John of payment therefor, shall be announced at the that part of the west half of the west half of tbe pal as due and payable for reason of said default in Hutchison Manufacturing Cotnuany, a corpora ­ left St. Johns, April 23th, en rpute for to Jane Nigbtser in_1830, and removed time and place oi letting. northwest quarter of section thirty-two, town tbe payment of interest aforesaid, making the tion, and bearing date on the 24th day of January, Helena, Montana, arriving in Chicago Notice is Further Hereby Given, That at the number eight north of range one west in Michigan, total of principal and interest due on said mort ­ A. D. 1894, and recorded in tbe Register of Deeds to Ohio, in 1836, and from there to time and place of said letting, or at auch other lying north of the center of Maple River, accord ­ gage on tbe date hereof the sum of $372.45, besides Office lor Clinton Countv, and State of Michigan the following morning, stayed in the Greenbush in 1818, where lie bas since lime and place thereafter to which I, the Drain ing to toe United States survey thereof, containing an attorney fee ot $15 00 provided In said mortgage on tbe 2nd day of February, 1891, in Liber 86 of Commissioner aforesaid, may adjourn the aanie, the 81 k acres he the same more or less, for the pur­ and by statute; and no suit or proceeding at law or Mortgages on page 62, and which said mortgage city until 10.30 in the evening, then left resided on the farm where he first the assessment for benefits and the lands comprised pose ot satisfying the amount due on said mortgage. iu equity having been instituted to recover any was duly assigned by said The John Hutchison within the Bad Creek Drain Special Assessment Dated, April 6, 1895. part of the debt secured by said mortgage; now. Manufacturing Company to John Hutchison by for Denver, via , Chicago, Northwester & settled. His wife died about twelve District, will he auhi ct to review. MARY W. LAWTON. therefore, by virtue of the power of sale in said assignment bearing date on the 6th day of March, Union Pacific R. R. Arriving in Den­ years ago. Mr. Eaegle was justice of The assessments for benefits will he the same Fkdkwa A Wa LBKIPOK, Assignee. mortgage contained and by statute in such case A. D 1894, aud recorded In said Register Of Deeds proportion as when ditch was dug. Attorneys for Assignee, 51-18. made and provided notice is hereby given tbat on Office on the 8th day of March, A. D. 1894, iu ver on the morning of the 28th. As we the peace in Greenbush 24 years and Dated this lfith day ol May. A. D. 1895. SATURDAY THE FIRST DAY OF JUNE, 1895, at Liber 81 of mortgages on page 162; that the pay WM ATKINSON, one o ’clock io tbe afternoon at tbe west Iront door menu provided for In said mortgage having re had the number and street of our of the court bouse for Clinton County, Michigan, In held other local offices. He was a re Township Drain Commissioner of the Township of ROBATE ORDER.-STATE OF MICHIGAN matted unpaid and In arrear for over sixty days friends there, we had no trouble the Village of St. Johns, in said county, there will tbe said John Hutchison, being authorized so to do publican in politics, and sent three sons Biughani. 5 2 County ot Cliuton, sa. At a session of tba Pro- be sold at public vendue to tbe highest bidder the Pbat* Court for the County of Clinton holden at by a clause in said mottgage, does hereby declare in 'finding 1hem; the home of Mr. to the Union Army in the war of the land in ’said mortgage described, viz.: Lot Nine the whole sum secured by said mortgage due and DMINISTRATOR'S SALK—NOTICE 18 the Probate Office, In the Village of St.Johns, on (9) and the south one third (lA) of lots tenl(10) ele­ Saturday, the 18th day of Mar In the ye*r parable; that there is claimed to be due and pay­ George Rice and wife. Mr. Rice is a Rebellion. He was an upright citizen, hereby given that by virtue, and to pur­ ven (11) and twelve (12) of block Fifty-seven (67) able on said mortgage, at the date of this notice, Asuance of licetise and authority granted to me, theone thousand eight hundred and ninety-five. of St. Johns, Clinton County, Michigan, for the son of C. D. Rice, of Essex, Clinton and highly respected by all who knew Present, Charles M. Merrill, Judge of Probate. ihe sum of five huudred and sixty-seven dollars undersigned, by the probate court ot Clinton purpose of satisfying the amount due on said and twenty-four cents, together with an attorney oounty, Michigan, on tlio 23d day of May. 1895, to In the matter of the Estate of JOHN mortgage. county; his wife the daughter of Nelson him. CLEMONS, deceased. On reading and filing the fee of twenty-five dollars provided for in said sell real estate belongl..g to the estate of Robert Dated March 2nd.. 1895. mortgage; that no proce.dings at law have been Jennie of the same township. Mr. Rice Young, deceits, d, I will sell at public vendue to petition duly verified of John W. Clemons CHARLES G. HATHAWAY, praying that he or some other suitable person, Instituted to recover the money secured by said left Michigan a few years ago —come to Victour Emanual Stephens was born the highest bidder. >ti the 13th D 4 Y OF JULY, _ .Mortgagee. mortgage, or any part thereof. Now, therefore, by 1895, at one o ’clock in the afternoon, at the probate may be appointed administrator of said estate. Fkdkwa A Walbridor , Thereupon it is ordered, tbat Thursday, tbe 13tb virtue of the power of sale contained in said mort ­ Denver with nothing but his hands and in Port Huron, November Cth, 1858. otlice, in the Village ol St. Jobos, in said County Attorneys for Mortgagee. gage and the statute in auch case made and pro ­ of Clioton, the following described premises, viz: day of June, A. D. 1895, at one o'clock in tbe He was converted at the age of 22 ; he afternoon be assigned for the bearing of said vided, notice Is hereby given tbat un SATURDAY. lots of gumption ; he, with the help of The undivided one-half of the north halfoi lot THE 22nd DAY OF JUNE, A. D„ 1895, at ten four, the undivided one-half of the south half of petition at the Probate Office in the Village bis wife, has secured a fine home in one lived a devoted Christian life bringing of8t. Johns, ROBATE ORDER.—STATE OF MICHIGAN o ’clock in tbe forenoon, I shall sell at public lot four, and the undivided one halt of the north County of Clleton, ss. At a sesssion of tbe auction, to the highest bidder at the west front door many souls to the Lord by his labors. half of lot five, all in block eleven. In the Village And it is further ordered, tbat notice he given PProbate Court for the Couoty of Clinton holden at of the finest cities in the union. to the persons interested in said estate of tbe time o libe Court House in the City of St. Johns, in th He died at the home of Wesley Penix, of St. Johns, in Clinton county, In the 8tate of and place of said bearing by causing a copy the Probate Office in the Village of St. Johns, on County of Cliutou, Slate ol Mtcbigau, that being Mr. Rice is conductor on the tramway Michigan, together with the right of ingress and Thursday, the 10th day of May, In the year one the place where the Jircuit Court for said county in Greenbush, May 20th, in the full egress to said land from State street across the of this order to be published jn The thousand eight hundred and ointy-five. street car line; a good position with Clinton Republican , a newspaper printed and is holden, the premises described in said mortga “, west twelve feet in width of lots five and six in Present. Charles M. Merrill, Judge of Probate. to-wit ‘.—That certain piece or parcel ol laud lyia. g hope of a glorious resurrection. The said block «leven; also the north nineteen and one- circulating in aaid County of Clinton, for three Io the matter of the estate of DAVID good pay, and although family ties are successive weeks previous to said day of bearing. and being situate in the township of Greenbush, funeral was held at the Grange Hall balf acres of the east seventy-eight acres of the PCOTT, deceased. On reading and filling the in tbe County of Clinton, and State ol Michigan, all in Michigan, they are so well pleased south-west fractional quarter ol section nineteen, 5-3 CHARLES M. MERRILL, petition duly verified of Mark P. Scott, praying (A true copy. ' Judge of Probate. and described as "Beginning at a stake at the with Denver they %woulu not think of May 22nd, and remains interred in the it) township seven north of range oue west, iu the tbat John E. Jayne or some other suitable per­ south-west corner of land owned and occupied by State of Michigan, and the west fractional half of son may be appointed administrator of said estate. John L. Knegal, thence run mug from said stake returning to Michigan to live. Eureka cemetery. He leaves a wife and the north-west Iractional quarter of section nine ­ ROBATE NOTICE.—PROBATE COURT Thereupon it is ordered, tbat Thursday, the south seventeen (17) rods and fourteen and one- five small children, Emma L. Clark, of teen, in township seven north of range one west Clinton County —sa. Notice is hereby given 6th day of June, A. D. 1895 at one o ’clock iu half (14k) feet to a stake ; thence cast seventeen After staying in Denver until the first in the State ot Michigan, containing seventy-two, thatP all claims and demands sgamst the estate of tbe afternoon he assigned for the hearing of said (17) rods and fourteen and one-half (14j^) feet to a day of May and having the best of Port Huron, a sister, wa9 present at the acres, more or less. DAN HARPER, deceased, Mrlil be heard by petition at the Probate office in tbe Village of St, stake ; thence north seventeen (17) roils and four ­ Dated, May 27ili, 1895. tbe Judge of Probate of said county, at the Pro- Johns teen and oue-haif (14k) feet to a stake, thence times while there, we resumed our funeral. ALBERT J. BALDWIN, ba'e Office in the Vilisge of 8t. Johns, cn the Tth Aud it is further ordered, tbat notice be given to west seventeen (17) rods and fourteen and one-half Admi Utrator of the Estate of Robert Young DAY OF NOVEMBER, A. D 1895 aud that th the persons interested in said estate of tbe time (14k) feet to the ulace of beginning, containi ng journey ’ over the Jl nion Pacific for deceased. 6 7 creditors of said deceased are allowed six months and place of said hearing by causing a copv of this two acres of land, be the same more or l,as, the from the date ol this notice in which lo present order to be publish'd in Die Clinton Republican Helena where we arrived on the even­ DAVID WARREN, above described land being situate on the uorth- ROBATE ORDER-STATE OF MICHIGAN, their claims for adjustment. a newspaper printed and circulating in said County west quarter of the northeast quarter of section ing of the third; thisGnished our journey One of the pioneers of Clinton county, died County of Clinton ss. At a session of the Daied May 2J, A. D. 169V of Clinton, for three successive weeks previous to eleven (II) in township eight (8) north of range at the home of his daughter Jennie —Mrs. PProbate Court for theCouuty of Clinton, holden at CHARLES M. MERRILL. said day of hearing. two (2) west, aud being the lands aud mill proper ­ by rail. The next morning we left 8 8 Judge of Probate. 4 3 CHARLES M. MERRILL, ty conveyed by Kotiert Clark and wile to said James Keeney—in St. Johns, May 10, 1895, the Probate Office, in the Viliam of 8t. Johns, on Helena at 4 o ’clock and commenced to Monday, the 27lh day of May. In the year A true copy.) Judge of Probate. esse S. Cahoou and Btrbara Cahoou, in his 84th|year. one thousand eight hundred and ninety-five. Dated March ICtb, 1895, ORTGAGE 8ALE. —DEFAULT HAVING climb the mountains by stage ; at eight The deceased was born near Cayuga Lake, Present, Charles M. Merrill, Judge of Probate, 'lHANCERY SALE.—IN PURSUANCE AND JOHN HUTCHISON. In the matter of the estate of MATHIAS M heen mado in the conditions of a mortgage Assignee of Mortgage. o ’clock we fiad climbed mountains, New York, August, 1812. He was united in executed by Charles .1. Dills and Celia C. Dills toJ by virtue of en order and decree of the cir­ Rlair , Edward ? A Blair , SIMON, deceased, Benard Hanses administrator Ccuit court for the County of ( Union, In chsncery, passed three gulches and down canyons marriage with Miss Caroline Robards, of Mon ­ of said estate haring made application fur the al­ Addison A. Woodruff, dated May 9th 1892, and Jacksor, Micti.gan, recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for in tbe Slate of Michigan, made and dated on the Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgage. roe, Mich., where he had previously settled, lowance of his final account. 5th day of April, :825, iu a certain cause therein to Canyon Ferry, here we crossed the Thereupon it isordereJ, tbat Thursday, the 20th Clinton couuty, in Michigan, on May 13th, 1892, in and in 1853 removed with his family to Liber 78 ot mortgages, on page 203, ou wbicb liending, whetein Tneodore H. Townsend is com ­ day ofjuuc, A. D. 1895, at one o ’clork in the plainant and Eunice K. Raylis is defendant. Notice Missouri on a terry boat and met our this county and settled in the township of afternoon be assigned fur I he examination of said mnrtgtge there is claimed to be due at the date of this uotice six hundred and five dol lars and eighty is hereby given that I shall sell at public auctiou to brother there. After a two hours drive Riley, where he continued to reside until 1878, account, al the Probate office in the Village of St. tbe highest bidder at the west front door of tbe f 1 UARDIAN SALE—BY VIRTUE OF A LI- Johns. cen's, besides an attorney fee of twenty-five when his wife died, soon after which he was dollus, stipulated iu said mortgage to be paid, court house in the Village of Sr. Johns, County of VT cense lo me trained on the IGtn day of April through gulch and cauyon we were at Attd it Is further ordered that notice he giveu 1895, by A. K. Cowles, judge of probate of the welcomed to the home of his daughter Jen ­ should any proceedings be taken to foreclose said Clinton and Stale ol Michigan, said court house to the persons interested in said estate, of the time being the place for holding court for said County Couuty of Ingham and State of Michigan, I shall our journey ’s end sate and well with and place of said hearing by causing a copy of this tnorigage; and no suit or proceedings at law or in nie —Mrs. Keeney -with whom he continued equity having been instituted to recover any part of Hinton, on FRI DAY. THK7TII DAY OF JUNK, sell at public auction on the 2)th DAY OF JUNE, the exception of being very tired. orderlo tie published in Tint Clinton Republican , 1895, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, all, or so much 1835 at one o'clock iu tbe atteinoon, at thedwelling to live until death closed his earthly career a newspaper printed and circulating in said Coun ­ ol the debt secured by said mortgage; therefore, by virtue of the power of sale in said mortgage con ­ thereof as may he necessary to raise the amount house sitat< d on l he lands hereinafter described. Here we find a country that .is new anu He was the father of eight honored and re­ ty of Clinton, fur three successive weeks previous due to the said coinplaiuant for principal, interest In the Township of Watertown, in the County of to said day of hearing. tained and of the statute in such case made and strange to us, but grand and beautiful as spected children, live of whom survive him, provided; notice is hereby given that on AUGUST and costs in this cause, of the following described Clinton, Michigan, all »lie right, title and interest CHARLES M. MERRILL, parcel ol land, to-wit: Commencing at a point ot Minnie A Kr as, William F. Kraasarid Carl A. being George, of Wilton, Iowa: Miles, of Bay (A true copy.) 6-8 Judge of Probate. 17th, 1895 at one o'clock iu tbe afternoon, at the Kraas, minors, in and to certain real estate in said it is atrange. City, Oregon: James and Mrs. Caroline Jones, west front door of the court house, for Clinton sixteen (16) rods and twelve (12) feet west of the couuty, in Michigan, in the Village ol St. Johns, southeast corner of section seven (7) ill township county, described as the undivided one-fiftb fl-5] There is very little farming dono in of Riley: and Mrs. James Keeney, of St. ROBATE NOTICE.----PROBATE COURT in said county, there will be sold at public vendue number five (5) north of range three (3) west and share and interest iu lands described as follows: Johns. He was a Congregationalist and an Clinton Couuty, ss Notice is hereby given to the highest bidder, tbe premises in said mort ­ running thence north parallel with east Hue Commenrin • at the southeast corner of the west this part of Montana. The occupation P one-balffkj of the southeast fractions! quarter upright man. The funeral occurred at the that all cDims and demands against the estate of gage described, viz: The east seven-twelfths of the twelve (12) rods, thence east seventy-one and oue- of the people here is mining and ranch­ GRANGE WHITLOCK deceased, will be beard by half (71 k) feet, thence south twelve (12) rods, [hj of section fourteen [I4J in township five [51 south three-fourths of the south-west quarter of nurth of range three [3| west, Clinton county, ing. The hills are dotted all over with Boughton school house and remains were the Judge of Probate of said Couuty, at the probate section thirty-five, and the west thirty acres of the thence west seventy-one and one-half (71 k) feet to interred in Boughton cemetery. office in the Village of St. Johns, on the 23rd DAY west half of the southeast quarter ot sectiou thirty- the place of beginning, all in township five (5) Michigan; thence west twenty-seven [27] rods, cattle and horses, while the gulches are OF NOVEMBER, A. D. 1895, and that the creditors five, all in township six north of range three west, north of range thiee (3), west, aaid county aud thence north far enough so that tbe land enclosed ALBERT SMITH. ol said deceased are allowed six months from the tu Michigan. Said sale will be made subject to the state. LEWIS SEVERANCE, by the two lines described, and a line running being turned inside out in search of date of this notice in which to piesent their claims Circuit Court Commissioner in and for Clinton directly north from tbe place of beginning and a An early settler and worthy pioneer of Clin ­ payment of three thousand dollars of principal on line which shall intersect tbe north aud soutn lines for adjustment. Mar 9th, 1897, with interest thereon, payable County, Michigan. 02-7 their hiden treasures ; but while some ton county, died at hishome in ’.he south-west Dated May 23rd, A D. 1895. annuallv, and computed at seven per cent, from Norton A Wkimer , at right angels, will comprise thirteen [43] acres ol CHARLES M. MERRILL. Solictors for Complainant. land, THOMAS KRAAS, are successful others toil in vain but portion of thistownship, Wednesday, May 10* May 9lb, 1895. Guardian of said Minors. 1895. He was born in Newfane, Niagara 6-4 Judge oi Probate. Dated, May 21, 1895. still keep tumbling on in hopes their ADDISON A. WOODRUFF, Daltd Lansing, April 17tb, 1895. 1-7 ROBATE ORDER.—STATE OF MICHIGAN, county, N. Y,, March 7. 1821; came to Michi­ Perrin * A Baldwin , Mortgagee. labors will be rewarded at last. If one gan in the year 1847, and settled on the very ROBATE ORDER-STATE OF MICHIGAN County of Clinton, as. At a session ol County of Cliuton, ss. At a session of the Attorneys for Mortgagee, 5-13 Pthe Probate Court for the County of Clinton could have some of our Michigan hay farm on which he had since lived to the time PProbate Court for the County of Cliuton, holden at holden at tbe Prooato Offlc\ in the Village of (~\ UARDIAN SALE.—BY VIRTUE OF A LI­ land to go with their grazing country o' his death—38 years. On March 7,1854, he the Probate Office iu the Village of St. Johns, on ortgage sale .—default having St.Johns on Saturday tbe 18th day of May io VY cense to me granted on tbe 16th day of April, was united in marriage with Miss Jane Hug- Monday, the 27lh day May, in the year one been niadein the conditions ofa certain mort ­ the year one thousand eight hundred aud ninety- 1895, by A. E. Cowles, judge of probate ot thecounty they could have it all their own way. thousand eight hundred and ninety-five. M bve. of Ingham and State of Michigan, I shall sell at gett, also of this township, who survives him- gage dated October 27th, 1888, executed by John Horses will live and do well without Preaent, Charles M. Merrill, Judge of Probate. label! and Mary A. Isbell to Porter K. Perrin, aud Present Charles M. Merrill, Judge of Probate. public auctiou, on the 20th DAY OF JUNE, 1895, As the fruits of this union one daughter was In the matter of the estate ot JOHN recorded July 24th. 1890, in the office of the In the matter of the estate of SARON R. at one o ’clock in the afternoon, at the dwelling being fed, but cattle should be fed lrom born to them, being Mrs. Sarah K. Emtnons, SCHI.EK, deceaaed. John G. Scltlee. executor ol Register of Deedn for Clinton county, in Michigan, PLOWMAN, deceased. On reading aud filing the house situated on the lauds hereinafter described the last will aud testament ot said deceased having in Liber 72 of Mortgages; on page 520. which petition duly verified of Mary A. Plowman in the Township of Watertown, in the County of three to four months to make a success of Bingham, and one son who died in infancy. made application fur the aiiowauce of hia final mortgage wa« duly assigned October 27, 1888, by prayiog that tlie last will and testament ol said Clinton, Michigan, all the right, title and interest of the business although there are a Two grand-children, two sisters—Mrs. Geo. account. said Porter K. Perrin to Mary A. Isbell by a deceased may lie proved and admitted to probate of Edward Mack, Rollin Mack, Belle Mack, John W. Estes and Mrs. E. Fitch, both of St. Johns; Thereupon it is ordered, that Thursday, the 20th written assignment, which was tecorded July 24th, and thit Luther L. Plowman or some other Mack aDd Waiter Mack, minors, in and to certain great many cattle that live in the hills day of June, A. D., 1895, at one o ’clock iu the 1890, in the office of the Register ol Deeds aforesaid, suitable person may be appointed executor of aaid real estate in said county, described as tbe undivided two half sisters, Mrs. Shaver, of Olcott, Ni­ aflcruoou be assigned tor the examination of said in Liber 73 of Mortgages on page 436; which mort ­ estate. one-fifth [1-5] share and interest in lands described all winter; some of them have to stand agara county, N. Y., and Mrs. Sarah Fero, account, at tbe Probate otlice in the village of St. gage was again duly assigned July 23.1, 1899, by Thereupon itJs ordered that Thursday the 13th as follows. Commencing at the southeast corner of Ceresco, Calhoun county, Mich., also survive. Johns. said Mary A. Isbell to the Clinton County Savings day of June, A. D. 1895, at one o'clock in tbe after­ the west one-half [\fr\ of the southeast fractional twice in the same place to make a Aud it Is further ordered, that notice be given Bank, by a written assignment, which was re­ noon, he assign, d for the hearing of said petition uarter [J-4] of section fourteen fl4Jin township shadow, but the horses nearly all look His funeral was held at the United Brethren to the persons interested iu said estate of the corded July 24ili. 1890, in tbe office of the Register and tbat the heirs at law and legatees of said deceased Qve (5J north of range three [3] west, Clinton church, and largely attended by sorrowing time and place of said hearing by causing a copy of Deeds aforesaid, in Liber 71 of mortgagee, on and all other persons interest'd in said will an County, Michigan; thence west twenty-seven [27J well, some of them being very fat even Of thisorder to be published in tlieCLINlON Repub ­ page 472; on wbicb mortgage there is claimed to required to appear at a session of said court then to rods, thence north far enough so tbat the land relatives and friendt. He was a loving hus­ lican , a newspaper printed and circulating in said beholden at tbe Probate Office, in the Villageol enclosed hy tbe two lines described and a line Kextfield . be due al ttie dale ot this uotice oue hundred aud now. S. P. band, a kind father and a true friend and neigh­ county of Cliuton for three successive weeks pre­ ten dollais and thirty seveu cents, besides an St.Johns, and show caese, if any there be, why running directly north from tbe place of beginning bor, and was known and recognized by old vious to said day of hearing. attorney fee of filleeu dollars, stipulated in said tbe will should not be approved. and a line which shall Intersect tbe north and CHARLES M. MERRILL, And it is further ordered, that notice be given south lines at right angels, will comprise thirteen and young as * Uncle Bert" Smith. mortgage to be paid should any proceedings be BEAL ESTATE. (A true copy.) 6-8 Judge of Probate- taken to foreclose said mortgage, and no suit or to the persons inter*sted in said estate of tbe [13] acres of laud. LOUISE A ARNDT, proceeding at law, or iu equity having been pendency of the hearing thereof by causing a copy Guardian of said minors. instituted to recover the debt secured by said of this order be published in the Clinton Repub ­ Dated. Lansing, April 17th, D95. 1-7 ROBATE ORDER —STATE OF MICHIGAN lican a newspaper printed and ciieulating in said Michael I’ung and wife to Henry Knoop, LOUISA PRUDEN DAVIS. County of Clioton, aa. At a session of the mortgage or any part thereof; now therefore by virtue of the power of sale in said mortgage con ­ County oi Clinton for three successive weeks pre­ -5 acres sec 15, Westphalia, $1,000. Louisa Pruden Davis was born in New PProbate Cou'i lor the Couuiy of Clinton, holden at vious to said day of hearing. the Probate ..dice. In the Village of St. Johns, ou tained, and of the statute in such case made and ^ D'-IINISTRATOR’S SALE.—NOTICE IS Ann Albertson to Wm Brown and wife, 40 York State, November 14, 1823, anti moved provided, notice is hereby given that on AUGUST 5 3 CHARLES M. MERRILL, Monday, the 27ih day of May. iu the year (A true copy.) Judge of Probate. i. Y hereby given lhar in piiisuance and by virtue acres sec 35, Victor, $1,900. with her parents to Olive township, this one thousand eight hundred and uinety-five. 17 th, 1895. at one o'clock iu the afternoon, at the oi license and authoilly granted to me, the under ­ county, when quite young, April 8, 1843. Present, Charles M. Merrill, Judge, or Probate. west front door of the court house for Clinton signed, by ttio probate court for the County of Mary Fink to Theresia Knsper wVa of lots county. In Michigan, in t be Village of St. Johns Clinton, Slate of Michigan, on the 12th day ot At the age of nineteen she was married to In the mailer of tbe estate of MAGGIE M. J 11 and 12. block 0, I.ance's add to Fowler, SMITH,deceaaed. James McCarthy, special admin ­ in said county, there will be sold at public vendue ROBATE ORDER -STATE OF MICHIGAN, April, A I). 1895, to sell real estate belonging to Wm. D- Davis and moved to Riley on the to the highest bidder the premises iu said mort ­ County of Clinton, ss. At a session of the tbe estate of MICHAEL SNYDER, deceased. I $415. istrator of said estate, having made application for PProbate Court for the County of Clinton, holden at farm wnere she resided nearly fifty-three the allowance of his final account, and for his gage described, viz: The southeast quarter of the will sell at public auction to the highest bidder, uortheast quarter of section two, in township six the Probate Office, io the Village of St. Johns, on therafor on the 1st DAY OF JUNE, A. D. 1895, at Cyrus Mather nnd wife to Jesse Guernsey years. Their home was blessed witli nine discharge. Monday, tbe 20th day of May, iti the. year Thereupon it is ordered that Thur day, the 20th north of range two west, io the Slate of Michigan. one o'clock p. m. at tbe Probate Office in the and wife 1 7-10 acres, Lebanon, $100. children—five boys and four girls, of whom Dated, May 21st, 1893 one thousand eight huudred and ninety-five.' Vil'ageofSt. Johns in said county of Clinton, the day of Juue. A. .D., 1895, at one oclock in the Present, Charles M. Merrill, Judge of Probate. Wm H I’ost and wife to Emma J Stebbiiis, three boys and three girls survive her. Her afisrnoou he assigned for the examination of said THE CLINTON COUNTY SAVINGS BANK, following described premises, to-wit: The west Pkrhins A Baldwin , Assignee. In the matter of the estate of NANCY ELLIS thirty acres of Ibe uorth half of ihe northwest 35 acres secs 2, 10, 11, Victor, $500. husband departed this life three years ago. account, at the probate office in the Village of St. deceaaed. On reading and filing the petition, Johns. Attorneys for Assignee. 5-13 quarter of section number two in the township of Since then she had lived a lonely life. During duly verified, of Sarah Besley, praying that the Westphalia, Clinton County, Slate of Michigan. Geo St Clair and wife to Perry J St Clair, And it is further ordered that notice be given last will and testament of said deceased may be the last three weeks of her life she was at the to the persons interested in said estate ot tbe time Said sale will be made subject to the unassigned 20V& acres sec 27, Ovid, $1,327.50. ortgage sale .—default having proved and admitted to probate and thatahe or dower interest in said premises of tbe widow of home of her daughter, Mrs. Rhoda Harper, and placo oi said hearing by causing a c<-> 1 been made in the eonditionsofacertam mort ­ some other suitable person uuy be appointed Lnrn Aldrich to Village of Maple Rapids, of this order to oe published in Tub Clinton Re­ said deceased. where she departed tnis life, April 21, 1895. gageM dated January 3rd, 1*93, made by George E. executrix of said estate. Dated, April 12tb, A. D. 1895. 10 rods sec 8, Essex, $125. publican , a newspaper printed and circulating Plowman and Emily R. Plowman, his wife, lo Thereupon it Is ordered that Thursday, the 13th The funeral was held at the Bengal and Riley in said county ot Clinton, for three successive weeks CATHERINE SNYDER, The Michigan Mortgage Company (Limited), of St day of June, A. D. 1895. at one o ’clock in the Administratrix of tbe Estate of Michael Snyder, Martha E Guller to Charles W Schrny, 40 Baptist church. Rev. E. D. Way, pastor offthe previous to said day ol hearing. afternoon, be assigned for the bearing of aaid peti­ CHARLES M. MERRILL, Johns, Michigan, and recorded in the office of the deceased. 62 7 acres sec 25, Watertown, $1850. church, officiating. register of deeds of Clinton County, Michigan, on tion, and that the heira at law and legatees of said (A trm copy ) 63 Judge of Prohate. January 7th, 1893, in liber 71 of Mortgages on page deceased and all other persons interested in Amos Coon nnd wife to Charles H Seibert, "Two tired hands. 260and 261; which said mortgage was duly assigned said will are required to appear st a session of said 80 acres, sec 25, Lebanon, $3,200. Folded over the breast, by said The Michigan Mortgage Company (Limited) court then to l>o holden at the Probate office in ROBATE ORDER -STATE OF MICHIGAN Wm L Tlllmore and wife to Wm Stevens. Wrinkled, ill shapen, by Coleman C. Vaughan, John H. Fedewa and tbo Village of St. Johns, and show cause, if any County of Clinton ss. At a session of the Edwin H. Lyon, receivers of said company, under there be. why Ihe will should not he approved. PPrebate Court for the Countv of Clinton, holden at 13Vk acres sec 21, Riley, $350. Forever at rest. The World's Fair Prize and by virtue of an order of the circuit court for And it is further ordered that notice he given the probate office, in the Village of St. Johns, on Henry Bair to Raymond Stark, 00 acres, Two tired bands the County of Clinton, in chancery, then and to the persons Interrsted in said estate of the Monday, tbe 6th day of May, In the year That toiled on life’s way, there mado to Newell Turner, by written assign ­ pendency ofthe heating thereof by causingacopy of one thousand eight hundred aud ninety-five. sec 35, Eagle. 1.858. Winner. ment, dated April 16tb, 1894, and recorded io the thisorder be published in the Clinton Republican Preaent, Cbarle* M. Merrill, Judge of Pro ­ Grown old in their labors Stephen M Parr to Lura Aldrich, 10 rods, same office on April 18th, 1894, In liber 80 of mort ­ e newspaper printed and circulating in aaid Couuty bate. Are resting today. ” gages on page 172, and it having been expressly of Clinton, for three successive weeks previous to In the matter of the estate of CATHERINE E. sec 8, Essex, $200 q c. Mother’s work,is finished; with heart sad and provided In said mortgage and tbe note collateral said day of hearing. WIEBER,deceased. On resdlngand filling thepeti- Geo M Dayton nnd wife, Iry Sheriff, to Wm iherrio, that should any default be made in tbe 5 3 CHARLES M. MERRILL, tion duly verified of William Herring praying weary many times, with but never flagging, payment of the interest, or any part thereof, on (A true copy.) Judge of Probate. that the last will and testament of slid deceased Cotreli, 130 acres secs 34 and 35, Riley, the patient hands ever toiling that the dear WEISFUSS” any dale whereon the same is made payable as in may be proved and admitted to probate, and that $5,290.51. ones should be made glad, toil and time have said mortgage and note expressed, and the seme QTATE OF MICHIGAN—TWENTY-NINTH Henry J. Wleber or some other suitable person A Perfect Youngr Stallion. should remain unpaid ami In arrears for the O Judicial Circuit, In Chancery. Suit pending tnav be appointed administrator of said estate. Joshua Corklns and wile, by Sheriff, to lelt their impress on the dear face; the heart space of thirty days and upwards, then and from in the Circuit Court for the County of Clioton, Iu Thereupon It is ordered that Friday, tbe 31st Richard A Moore. 142 acres sees 7, 8, 18, had known bitter sorrows as well as joys, the thenceforth the principal sum of said mortgage Chancery, at St. Johns, on tbe rlxteenth day of May, A. D. 1895, at one o ’clock in the Olive. $2,404.27. hands, once small and white, show years of and note of one thousand dollars (31,000) with all day of May , A. I* 1895. OscarCole, complainant afternoon be assigned for the hearlog of said I have purchased this 5-year-old Ger­ arrearages of interest thereon, should, at tbe vs. Emily Cole, defendant. Jn this cause it petition and that the heirs at law and legatees of hardest labor, often thankless, again abundant ­ John F Neal et nl. by Sheriff, to Harriet G man G<>ach Horse from a herd of option of said mortgagee, its successors or assigns, appearing that defendant, Emily Cole, is a resi­ said deceased and all other persons interested in Hart, 90 Hcres. sec 6, Ovid, $2888. ly repaid. Yet looking at them through scald ­ become due aud payable immediately thereafter, dent of this state, but ber whereabouts are un ­ said will, are required to appear at a session of ing tears they seetn the most beautiful hands although the period limited for the payment known, therefore, on motion of Fedewa A Wal- said court then to be.bolden at the Probate Office, Jones Marsli by Sheriff, to Geo Denslow, thereof might not then have expired; and default bridge, solicitors for complainant, it la ordered in tbe Village of St. Johns, sad show cause if any in the world. Myfdear old mother’s hands SO acres sec 11, DeWItt, $204.91. HIGH BRED STALLIONS having been made In the payment of the interest tbat defendant enter ber appearance in said there be, why tbe will should not be approved. soothed me with their stronger clasp all due on said note and mortgage on July 1st, 1891, cause on or before three months front the date of And it is further ordered that notice be given to John Baumgardner nnd wife, by Sheriff, to through life—have never swerved in their and on January 1st, 1895, and such interest having thisorder, and that within twenty davs the com ­ tbe persons Interested io said estate,of the pendency Victor Jorae, 80 acres, sec9,Olive,$1418.41. Exhibited by Lang & Lee at my feed remained-unpaid and In arrears for the space of plainant cause this order to lie published in the of tbe hearing thereof by causing a copy loyalty to children and sometime, I am sure, barn. thirty days and upwards, the sail Newell Turner, Clinton Republican , said publication to be con ­ of this order to be published In Thk Clinton Re­ Wm M Russell et al by Sheriff, to Porter K "Where crystal streams thro’ endless years. assignee cl said mortgage, has elected and does tinued once in each week for s*x weeks in publican , a newspaper printed end circulating in Perrin. 20 acres sec 18, Greenbush, $407.42. Flow over golden sands — hereby elect, to treat the said principal sum of one succession. 8. B. DABOLL, said County of Clinton, for three successive weeks, thousand dollars (1,000) of aaid note and mortgage Fkdkwa a Walbridoe , Circuit Judge. previous to said day of hearing. And where the old grow young again, Fannie J Peck et nl, by Sheriff, to Porter THIS perfect young horse was bred by M. as due and payahl ; upon wbicb mortgage there it Solicitors for Complainant. 6-7 CHARLES M. MERRILL, K Perrin, 40 acres sec 7, I^-banon, $142.25, I’ll clasp my mother's hands.” COM. Detjens, at Seetermulie. Klmshorn Hols ­ claimed to be due and unpaid at the date of this (Atruecopr.) 3 3 Judre ol Probate. tein, Germany, and is closely related to notice tbe sum of one thousand and eighty dollars ROBATE NOTICE.—PROBATE COURT, Geo W McCrumb to Joseph Hlnmnn lots 1, the (test families of his class, and was sent and fifty-six cents (tl.080.bfi) besides an attorney Clinton Countv —as. Notice is hereby given 2, 8, 0. 7, 8, block 11, lots 5, 0, 7, 8, block 0, here, with otners, to the great World's Fair fee of thirty-five dollars [$35| provided by statute thatP all claims and demands against tbe estate of to be paid should any proceedings be taken to T3ROBATE ORDER.—STATE OF MICHIGAN lots 7, 8. block 2, lots 3, 4, 5, 0, block 10, Catarrh Cannot he Cured by the German government, and was MARY A. BRAY, deceased, will be heard by J. County of Clinton, ss. At a session of tbe awarded by the judges in the horse de ­ foreclose the same; and no suit or proceedings at the Judge of Probate of said county, at tbe Pro ­ and other land, Eagle, $840. law having been Instituted to recover any part of Probate Court lor tbe County of Clinton holden at with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they can ­ partment at this great show, the sweeps­ bate office in the Village of St. Johns on tbe 9th the Probate Office in the Village of St. Johns on takes prize over the large number of North tbe debt secured by said mortgage; now, therefore, DAY OF NOVEMBER, A. D. 1895, and tbat the cre­ Joseph Hlnmnn to James A Hnntoon. 38 by virtue of the power of sale contained in aaid Tuesday, the 28th day of May, in the year one not reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a German horses there shown; and the third ditors of said deceased are allowed six months from thousand eight hundred and ninety-five. feet of east end lot 4. block 10, Engle $50 qc. blood or constitutional disease, and in order to prize among all German horses. This mortgage, and of tbe statute In such case made the dato of this uotice in which to preseot their and provided, notice la hereby given thatthe said Present, Charles M. Merrill, Judge of Probate, Sarah Webb to James Houghton, 40 acres cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's model of the horse family, with the certifi­ claims for adjustment. In the matter ol the estate of JOSEPH cates. medals and ribbons awarded nim at mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale ol the pre­ Dated May 9lb, A. D. 1895. mises therein described, at public aurtlon to the THELEN, deceased. Mary A. Tbelen. adminis ­ sec 12. Bath, $55 q c. Catarrh Cure is taken internal, and acts directly the greatest show yet witnessed by the CHARLES M. MERRILL, tratrix of said estate, having made application for on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's world's people, may lie seen at my feed highest bidder, at the weal front door of the court 5-4 Judge of Probate. Wm O’Connor to Fernando M Plggott, 40 house io the Vilisge of HI, Johns in said county, the allowance of her final account. Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was barn. St. Johns, where further description, Thereupon It is ordered, that Thursday, the 20th acres sec 19, Essex, $7.50 q e. pedigree and terms may be had. tbat being tbe place of holding the circuit court prescribed by one of the best physicians in this for said county, on SATURDAY. JULY 18 th, RORATE NJTICE.—PROBATE COURT, day of June, A. D 1895, at one o ’clock In the Auditor General to Wm O’Connor, 101 Clinton County, m. Notice it hereby given afternoon be siS'gned for tbe examination of said country for years, and is a regular prescription. 1895, at one o'clock in tbe afternoon of thatday, P acres sec 19,-Essex and lA*banon, $11.38. A cordial invitation i$ extended to and tbat the premises are described in said mort ­ that all claims and demands against the estate account,of at the Probate office in the Village of It is composed of the best tonics known, com ­ gage as follows: Tnat pot Hon of the southwest PARSON JEFFREYS, deceased, will be beard by St. Johns. bined with the best blood purifiers, acting everyone interested in High Bred one qnarter [K] of section lumber eight [8] of tbe Judge of Probate of aaid county, et tbe Probate And It Is further ordered that notice be given to horses to call and see this one. township number seven f7 J north of range number Office in the Village of St. Johns, on tbe IBth DAY tbe persons interest'd in said estate of the time What Zoa Phora won ’t do for ailing directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect three [8] west, in Michigan, lying south of tbe OF NOVEMBER, A. D 1895, and thattbe creditors aDd place of said hearing by causing a copy of this women, no medicine will. combination of the two ingredients is what pro ­ Detroit, Grand Haven A Milwaukee railway, In of said deceased are allowed eix months from the order to be published in tbe Clinton Republican , duces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Clinton county, Michigan. date of this notice in which to present their claims a newspaper printed and circulating in aaid Dated, April 15th. 1896 for adjustment. County of Clinton for three successive weeks pre­ Send for testimonials, free. NEWELL TURNER. Dated, May I5th, A. D. 1895. vious to said day of hearing. Broken down women renewed by F. J. CHENEY A Co., Toledo, O. M.L. KENYON, Lyon A Doolino , Assignee of Mortgage. 6-4 CHARLES M. MERRILL, 6-8 CHARLES M. MERRILL, Zoa Phora. IV Sold by Druggists, 75c. (4-4J Corner Clinton avenue and Railroad street. Attorneys for Assignee. S2-18. Judge ol Probate. (A True Copy.) Judge of Probate.

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And at no time were opportunities at so rich a promise. Read the list carefully and come prepared to buy some of the Greatest Bargains you ever saw. $C^*The Worlds Fair Half Dollars will be given in change on these Two Special Sale Days

•Qiase&StflriboTrk 42 “SetsVBrevnd- Shoes! Shoes!

2L

•S«d 25 doz men ’s working shirts at...... 25c 36 in \ wool English Henrietta...... 10c 15 doz men ’s dark outing shirts at.....45c •eft “the,* of rivalry. Look at this money saving sale for 36 in all wool casbimere...... 25c Men ’s Jersey Rib shirts, summer the masses. 40 in “ *• 35c weight, at...... 25c •World's-fair 46 in “ Henrietta silk finish.... 50c $1 men ’s laundried dress shirts at.....75c 46 in “ Serge ...... 50c Men ’s Negligee shirts, $1 shirt for .....75c Any of our fine $2 00 Oxfords. 8 different 3fi in black Mohair...... 35c styles in tan or black, you can buy in this Ladies capes to close J price Ladies’ Shoes. sale for ...... $169 Colored Dress Goods Ladies China silk parasols ...... $1.75 Ladies' Opera toe slippers, soft and easy Ladies sun u nbrellas, twilled silk..$1.25 Canned Goods Tea only ...... 75c if plaids sold last year for 25c at...... 15c Ladies summer skirts, 35c quality, 2} lbs new moon $1 25 $1 00 36 in 1 wool English Henriettas...... 19c Ladies' fine kid. congress, imitation button, for ...... 25 reg price our price 2 lbs best dust in town 35c 25c any style toe, regular price $3.50. Cut sale 30 in all wool cashimers at...... 25c Job 1 lot heayy bluedemmins, sale 2 lb can marrofat peas 10c 5c price only ...... $2.79 Gentlemen’s Shoes. 36 in fancy novelties at...... 25c price...... 10 1 lb can alaska salmon 15c 10c Cocoanut Choice of all our 50c novelties to close Ladies ’ Low Juliet, congress. Piccadilly or Men ’s fine calf lace shoes, any style toe. hand 85c heavy black silk mitts for ...... 252 lb can corn beef 22c 20c Wetmons sbreded per lb in pkg narrow square toes, patent leather up the sewed welts. We have considered them 1 out, foreign make, at...... 39c 25c MissesBilk mitts for ...... 19 front, in black or tan, regular price $2.50. great value for $3.50. Cut sale price only 20 pieces (solid colors) fancy effects was Soda 40c !.jc Cut sale price only ...... $1 08 ...... $2.89 Childrens handkerchiefs for ...... 02Hatch & Jinks 8c 4c Dunham in blk sbrd 25c 20c 75c at...... 50c Childrens handkerchiefs for ...... 04 Ladies ’Dongola or tan, Juliet congress, very Men's calf shoes, lace or congress, razor or Wide hemstiched handkerchiefs, Baking Powder comfortable shoe, regular price $1.75. Cut square toes, very stylish—there isn ’t a shoe in Wash Goods Maple Sugar sale price...... $1.39 town like it for less than $3.00. Cut sale SO pieces foreign wash goods all new white, colored, for ...... 05 Dr Price 1 lb can 50c 40c On sale days per lb 8c Ladies ’ fine kid, button or lace, razor or narrow price...... $2.37 R effects at...... 10c, 12jc and 15c 1 lot wide satin ribbons for ...... 10 Royal 1 lb can 50c 40c square toes, soft, flexible and easy, hvery 02 dealer in the country sells them for $3.00. One-hundred ninety-three pairs of the Snedi ­ 1 case light tigured chaliies at...... 4c 1,000 papers 5c needles for ...... Calumet 1 lb can 25c 20c Tobacco cor & Hathaway stock left, worth $2.50. Cut 15 pieces black figured chaliies at...... 5c 5 pieces boys cottonade ...... 08 Liberty 1 lb can 25c 20c Cut sale price...... $2.37 sale price...... -...... $1.65 $1.25 mens heavy cottonade pants... 99 1 lb 40c chewing 30c Ladies' fine kid, button or lace shoes, pointed 15 pcs fancy Ducks at...... 10c Cheese or square toes, patent leather tips—we will Men ’s fine tan shoes, razor toes, all sizes, very 18 pcs summer outings at...... 5c 1 case 6 hook special corsets, good 1 lb 20c smoking 15c stylish—good values at $3 00. Cut sale price We have some very nice new cheese, 1 lb 30c chewing 25c put them against any $2.50 shoe In the city. only ...... -...... $2.40 10 pcs " “ dress patterns value at 50c, sale price...... 39 we want you to sample it. Sale price Cut sale price...... $1.89 was 10c at...... 8c 5 bales brown cotton worth 6c for... 05 1 lb 15c smoking 10c We will sell during this sale our Men's tan (limit 50 yds to each purchaser). on these days 10c 365 pairs of fine kid shoes, patent tip—we $2.50 shoes-as stylish as any$4.00 shoe—for 10pcs summer fancy outings was 12Jc..l0c Sugar closed out the whole lot from Snedicor & only ...... $1.98 3 cases best prints, including blues, 2 bales good cotton at...... 31 Fish Hathaway—retails for $2.50. Cut sale price blacks, greys and reds at...... 5c Y ard bleached muslin at 6 and 7c yard. 20 lbs granulated $1 00 Best cod boneless 3 lbs for 25c only ...... -...... -...... $1.79 BUTTON 15 pcs fine dimities, extra wide at.... 25c 24 lbs light brown $1 00 No 1 herring per box, scaled lie Ladies ’ fine kid button shoes, patent tips, any Misses fine kid shoes, patent tips,—usually sell 1,000 yds wash laces per yard at 28 lbs dark brown $1 00 style toe, usually sells for $1.75. Cut sale for $1.50. Cut sale price...... $1.10 price...... $1.39 Jersey Ribbed Underwear...... 6c 7c 8c 10c 12Jc and 15c Misses fine kid shoes, plain toes, sell for $1.75 1 case. Ladies ’ Egyptian col vests...... 05c worth double the price asked. Crackers Mason Fruit Jars Cut sale price...... $1.29 Big value in lace curtains at...... OXFORDS 1 case ladies ’ heavy Egyptian col vestsOSc 7 lbs No 1 crackers 30c 25c Fruit jars are up out of sight, 2 qt cans Misses kid pat tip spring heel button shoes 1 case ladies ’ taped neck sleeves at 15 ...... per pair 75c $1 00 $1 25 and $2 25 Ladies' fine kid Oxfords, patent tip, warranted worlh $1.25 for ...... 80c Men ’s 10c shirtings for ...... 8c Rolled Oats are worth $1 00 per gross at wholesale not to rip, good style for only ...... 85c or 2 for ...... 25c today. We propose that our customers Childrens kid pat tip button shoes sells for 00c 25 doz extra line drab vests at-...... 25c Fancy ticking for skirts for ...... 121c Nudavine flakes 35c 25c Ladies ’ fine kid Oxford patent tip only ...... 98c sale price...... —...... 65c All remnants of triming silk at & off 2 lb pkg quaker oats 13c 10c shall reap the benefit of our early pur­ 1 cas“ ladies ’ pants, fine quality at.....25c chases. We quot as follows: Ladies' fine kid Oxfords, patent tips, any style Childrens kid pat tip button for ...... 55c 1 case Misses vests, fancy neck Ladies union suits...... 50c 2 lb pkg breakfast food 13c 10c toe, hand sewed-sells everywhere for $1.76 y sleeves at...... 10c Kaizers patent fringe tip silk gloves Brooms per doz Cut sale price only ...... $1 89 Baby shoes for only ...... ~...... -25c for ...... 50c 2 good brooms 30c 25c No 1 Mason pints 55c Hosiery Curling irons all sizes for ...... 5c 1 good barn broom 40c 25c No 1 Mason quarts 65c Expend a little thought upon this announcement between Children’s muslin pants...... 9c and up 1 case ladies ’ black hose, extra Soap No 2 Mason 2 quarts 75c length at...... 08c French model gauze corsets ...... 50c Are you aware that you have always the time you read it and the time to open our doors on these 1 case ladies ’ black hose, regular Cake stand doyles ...... 3c 7 bars Buckeye soap 35c 25c id too much for can tops and rub­ made 15c 2 for ...... 25c Ladies shirt waist setts...... 25c 7 bars Banner soap 35c 25c ra. We are going to sell this year 25 doz lauies black hose, 40c quality..25c Men ’s coin parses...... 5c 6 bars Babbit’s soap 30c 25c K SPECIAL SALE DAYS, todies ’ and Misses tan hose at 10,15and 5c box of hair pins...... 3c 4 bars tar 40c 25c Pure rubbers per dozen at 5c 25c. Dress stays per set...... 5c Raisins Can tops per dozen at 35c as every reader will be clamoring at the door to get in. Mark Boys ’ bicycle hose still going at...... 19c Fancy pocket fans...... 10c 4 lb layer raisins 40c 25c The above quotatiohs are for pure rub­ Men ’s fast black seamless J hose at... 15c Ladies 25c leather belts...... 10c the date ; don ’t hesitate, for the chance will not come again. Mep’s heavy socks at...... 07c All silk winsdor ties (12 shades)...... 12jc 6 lbs 3 crown raisins 40c 25c bers and not cheap composition.

Chapin 8c Co.—Dry Goods. Travis 8c Baker—Wallpaper and Drugs. Corbit 8c Valentine—Hardware and Implements.

FRED A. TRAVIS CHARLES P. BAKER I am in favor of any party CORBIT & or any firm whio favors and WOMAN’S lives up to the state law of employing Registered Phar­ VALENTINE^> macists. For Pure Drugs go DEALERS IN to Travis & Baker’s, put up by VANITY. Graduated Registered Phar­ Thev were talking about the vanity of woman, and one of the few ladies macists. When you want present undertook a defence. “Of course ” she said, “I admit that women are vain H Hardware ail Agricultural and men are not. ” “Why” she added, with a glance around, the necktie of the the best for the least money handsomest man in the room is even now up the back of his collar. And she smiled —for every man present put his hand up to the back of his neck. Ibat buy Masuary’s, the old re­ WAGONS AND BUGGIES. proves it. We being men are no exceptions. What we are vain of, however, is liable. It wears the longest this: being able to offer each an elegant line of good# at such reasonable prices and gives the best satisfac- We sell the New Steel Standard Oliver Plows Nos. WE’VE CAUGHT THE TOWN _ _ tion. 98 and 99 that never break, and they use the with our beautiful line of : Reversible Points and Shoes that save the farmer Wash Goods Embroideries Use Cooper ’s Sheep Dip, the best made. Pure Paris 30 per cent, in repairs. A new feature is the Spring Suitings Dotted Swisseg Capes Lace Curtains Green, London Purple, Insect Powder at lowest prices. Shallow Suction Point whioh makes the draft one-third less. We sell a £ood Spring Tooth ’ Har­ Parasols Oriental Laces Best Mexican Grass hammocks from 75c up. Use Travis & Table Damask Torchon Laces row for $10.00. Draperies Point DeVenise Laces Baker’s Furniture Polish, it will make your furniture look like Lace Curtains Point DuChiene Laces •ew. New Wall Paper just received, elegant patterns and Satin Welts Irish Point Laces Gilt Cloth Belting and Buckles cheap. Yours for business, OLD STAND, Butter and Eggs are Cash and^the place is TRAVIS & BAKER. Walter1 • j&tfeet • Wegt. CORNER DRUG STORE. CHAPIIMS’ES

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