1 When You`re Ready to Buy | WB Vorkeller, Ceresota Flour School
Transcription
1 When You`re Ready to Buy | WB Vorkeller, Ceresota Flour School
Montague Observer. MONTAGUE. THIRTY-SECOND YEAR LOCAL NEWS M I C H , O C T . 2 8 1909. T h e Coon Creek football g a m e between Muskegon and Montague indep e n d e n t t e a m s was won bf t h e l a t t e r score 5 t o 0. Mr. and Mrs. W m . Barr have postponed t h e i r i n t e n d e d western t r i p and h a v e called off t h e i r a u c t i o n sale of household goods which was to have t a k e n place Nov. 2. T h e M o n t a g u e H i g h school foot ball t e a m w e n t to Shelby l a s t F r i d a y and were done up to t h e t u n e t'f *27 to 0. T h i s Is t h e t h i r d d e f e a t i u r boys have suffered a t t h e h a n d s of t h e Shelby t e a m . A game will be played </h t h e school gridiron n e x t .Saturday w i t h Hart. E x t e n s i v e ImproverawitK 1 will be m a d e t h i s fall on t h e u j d Douglas place now owned by Mr. Illlger, m i l l i o n a i r e f u r n i t u r e m a n u f a c t u r e r of Chicago. T h e l a r g e c o t t a g e wlp be moved 80 feet n e a r e r i h 9 lake by Wm. T h l e m a n and t h e bulldtfigs are being r e p a i n t e d by F r e e m a n Flaehnel. NEW SERIES Local Talent Play. W. C. Ford has secured a position In A g r e a t deal of i n t e r e s t is c e n t e r e d Muskegon. upon t h e local t a l e n t play, " S c e n e s In 2/our S/rocer tPromptlj/, Mrs. Lewis F i l l m e i e r h a s been q u i t e a Union D e p o t , " to be rendered at III t h i s week. t h e opera house t o m o r r o w , F r i d a y n i g h t , Oct. 29. D u r i n g t h e past week Mrs. I l l r a m Hill was a Muskegon Pay y(jur g r o c e r cash whenever you can. 40 c h a r a c t e r s h a v e been thoroughly visitor Monday. You l l l l l e know t h e t e r r i b l e burden he has to carry on a c c o u n t of t h e drilled by Miss Luella Z. D r a k e , and A new f e l t roof is being p u t on t h e carelessness a n d InditTcrence of his customers. t h e coming e v e n t promises to be one F r a n k l i n house. E v e r y t h i n g he h:is In t n e world Is a t s t a k e a n d more f a i l u r e s a m o n g Go to t h e Union Depot F r i d a y n i g h t grocers a r e caused by t h e neglect or r e f u s a l of people to pay him t h a n from any o t h e r cause. - 4 a t t h e opera house. % T h e g r o c . r Is never a rich man. l i e works h a r d from m o r n i n g u n t i l Mr. and Mrs. Percy Douglas have n i g h t and his prolits a r e small. Many a day laborer is b e t t e r off t h a n he gone t o Chicago for t h e w i n t e r . a 3 a t t h e end of t h e year. Mrs. Wm. T h l e m a n and t w o d a u g h O f t e n w h e n he needs money to pay pressing bills and c u s t o m e r s owe *him money long past due, he Is a f r a i d to ask for It for fear t h e y will g e t t e r s s p e n t S a t u r d a y in Muskegon. mad. g T h e f a m i l y of H. P . H o m p e r h a v e T h i n k of It! A f t e r he h a s t r u s t e d t h e m , favored t h e m , h a n d e d o u t his ^ r e t u r n e d t o Chicago for t h e w i n t e r . goods freely and t h e n needs t h e money which belongs to him, h e ' s a f i a i d to ask for It. Mrs. G. W . P e t e r s o n a n d a o o b h o r e y Case a f t e r case Is recorded of grocers who h a v e been forced to t h e wall, s p e n t .Saturday In Muskegon. b a n k r u p t e d , ruined completely, w i t h all heir hopes blasted because t h e y Miss Jessie Robinson is t h e g u e s t of could n o t collect money t h a t wa^ d u e t h e m . Miss Blanche Boardwell t h i s week. Reader, If you h a v e been one of t h e "iareless ones—If you have never t h o u g h t of t h e s e things—give It s o m e a t t e n t i o n now. Chas. W e n t was t h e g u e s t of his If you have Influence, use It for your f r i e n d , t h e grocer. a u n t . Mrs. Chas. R a t h b o n e , last week. Buy w h a t vou will, g e t t r u s t e d for a n y t h i n g else you will, b u t for t h e T h e caf.c of N o r a D o w n * ^ vs. Mr. Misses Clara a n d E s t h e r H a n s o n love of justice— h a s been sick and o u t of school for a P l a n k of Claybanks, in which t h e f o r m e r sued t h e l a t t e r for t h e mainweek. Mrs Joseph A poll a n d Mrs. F . W. t e n e n c e of her child, wqs s e t t l e d o u t Sadler were Muskegon visitors T u e s - of c o u r t T u e s d a y . T h e jury was j u s t a b o u t to be d r a w n when Mr P l a n k day. HH c a m e to Miss Downey's t e r m s and H e n r y Moan of i l a r t is t h e new as settled W. E. O s m u n was t h e a t t o r s i s t a n t b a r b e r a t A. G. T h o m p s o n " s ney for t h e plaintiff. shop. H u n t e r s ' i n t h e w o f e s should be M i t . H e n r y E r t e l Is visiting her more c a r e f u l w h e n discharging t h e i r Luella Z. Drake, Reader and Lady d a u g h t e r , Mrs. H e n r y Rabe, in ClayI firearms, especially wjien they are Baritone, In 'Scenes In a Union Debanks. near dwellings. L a s t jveek someone H e n r y S t r e n g of D e t r o i t s p e n t S a t - s h o t t h r o u g h t h e window of W. C. p o t " at. t h e opera house F r i d a y n i g h t . u r d a y w i t h his p a r e n t s , Mr. a n d Mrs. F j i ' d ' s residence In t h e o u t s k i r t s of of t h e best home t a l e n t p r o d u c t i o n s C. L. S t r e n g . Being under t h e village. F o r t u n a t e l y t h e r e was ever seen in M o n t a g u e Miss E t h e l F o w l e r has resumed her no one In t h e house a t £he t i m e as t h e t h e auspices of t h e Presby. Ladies t e a c h i n g a t R o t h b u r y a f t e r a four b u l l e t s c a t t e r e d t h e glals clear across society, t h e proceeds will be devoted weeks' vacation. t h e room where t h e b u l l e t was found. to a worthy cause and all should p a t ronize t h i s u n i q u e and laughable Mrs. A n n a Webb a n d daughter G l a d s t o n e Dowlc Is in Chicago t h i s h o m e spun e n t e r t a i n m e n t . FollowE l i z a b e t h , h a v e gone to Chicago to week to dispose of some of t h e furing Is t h e c a s t of c h a r a c t e r s : spend t h e w i n t e r . n i t u r e of Zlon t a b e r n a c l e awarded to T r a i n c a l l e r I»r. Geo. S m t t l i Mrs. Dowlc a t a recent t r i a l . Mrs. R e v . K r u s e a t t e n d e d t h e m e e t i n g of Ticket aKent M a r l in J a r k s o n Pell Smith t h e m i n i s t e r i a l association a t G r a r d Dowle Is well pleased w i t h t h e r e s u l t L u n c h Co. m a n Uunald Flotcn of t h e c o n t e s t which gave her more B o o t b l u c k R a p i d s t h i s week. Mr. J o i i f s Chas. Peek t h a n s h e expected. T h e trial over M r s . I j i r d n M r s . H. C. F l o l e n Mr. a n d Mrs Chas. R a t h b o n e s j j e n t Iliiiinah Lelchsenrlnt' S u n d a y in G r a n d R a p i d s on Mr. R's. her late h u s b a n d ' s will will t a k e place M i s s P i p e r M r s . D. G e a r y In J a n u a r y , An effort will be m a d e M r s . S n y d u r r e t u r n from a t r i p t o t h e Soo. Nellie Pugh to break t h e will so t h a t M r s r Dowle M l r a i t d j T h e L a d l e s Aid society of t h e M e t h Uncle .lohu Robt. D e y m a n n can p a r t i c i p a t e In t h e division of t h e MM. S m i t h Myrtle Wood odist c h u r c h will m e e t w i t h I -s. property. Nnncy Potter M r s . C. H i l l K r u s e n e x t Wednesday a f t e r n o o n . Mr. B. P . Mills Chas. CT Coors, formerly e d i t o r of J u s l a h P o t t e r Cider apples a r e b r i n g i n g a good Howard Durham t h e M o n t a g u e Observer, has b o u g h t M r . A r i u s t r o n ; ; Samh J e n n i e May P e c k price t h i s fall. T h e M o n t a g u e Cider 1 t h e " S u n , " a'yreekiy n e w s p a p e r pub- B e t t y Dorrice Sweet mill Is paying 34c per h u n d r e d pounds. lished a t Farewell, Mich. Mr. Coors P e t e r Kenneth Leadick You will also find a a n y t h i n g you need in t h e line of "Scenes In a Union D e p o t " appear- r e t u r n e d h ^ m e yesterday a f t e r closing T h o m a s ' : Johnnie Langlcr G u n s , amunition, H a r d w a r e , T i n \ v a n c , G r a n i t e \ v a r e , P a i n t s L o m l n e Hill ed In Muskegon a s h o r t t i m e ago a n d t h e deal a n d will t ike possession 'if Dot Myrtle Smith Oils. etc. was voted t h e finest ever. D o n ' t rolss his new business Nov. 1 F a r e w e l l Is B e n Trlx.. A n n a Loicbsenriot; it. 7 t h e f o r m e r home fif "Mrs. and M T i a l (f -oors — -JV •• W Mr. S p r i n k Will A h c r M r . Co.>rs p!^ Mis.Manindale... MissGeorgiii Trowbridge before locating on his f a r m In W h i t e Mr. •' \ . . . M r . K . J . Leddlck dltippeo I n i o d a y for a brief visit w i t h River. He will also sell or r e n t his M r s . N e e d y M r s . J . B. W a t t o n relatives. f a r m a n d move to F a r e w e l l In t h e 0 | n ; r t t C o m p a n y Nettie Tallent The L a d l e s Aid society of t h e near f u t u r e . We are sorry t o lose B r i d n Groom Carl Schutssler t h i s . e s t i m a b l e f a m i l y from our m i d s t , M e t h o d i s t c h u r c h will have a sale of Bob Roy P u g h Archie Jackson EE 3 f a n c y and plain a r t i c l e s F r i d a y even- b u t we wish t h e m Godspeed In t h e i r D i c k new field. Rosy Mable Smith £ Montague, ^ 3 ing, Nov. 19th. Molly Bessie S m i t h A small e x h i b i t of f a r m p r o d u c e C a s s y J a c o b Boss a n d family of G r a n d Lucy Wannamaker R a p i d s h a v e moved h e r e a n d a r e oc- grown a r o u n d M o n t a g u e h a s been J u p y Roth Leddick o a i u i u i u i i i i u i i u i i i u i i i u i u i i i i i i i i n i i u i u i i i u i i i i i i i i i i i i u i u o c u p y i n g Mrs. Geo. S a u e r ' s house on s t a r t e d In t h e F a r m e r s Bank a n d a t - M r s . H u m m e r Miss D r a k e M r s . D. F l a g s t e d t r a c t s a g r e a t deal «f a t t e n t i o n and M i s s B e a c o n S t r u t Dowllng s t r e e t . Mr.White Bldon Tallent Chicken h a w k s g e t a very cold re- i n t e r e s t . T h e apple display is es- L i l y . . . . A m e l i a Schuessler Bessie Smith ception a t Prof. S a d o n y ' s place. Mon- pecially fine. T h e e x h i b i t Is being L i u h Mr. Sprink be b r o u g h t down 18 w i t h his rifllc. A added t o every day a<}d will no d o u b t G e o Harold Fred W a n n a m u k i T be g r e a t l y enlarged upon before t h e p r e t t y good m a i k s m a n . Grace Baxter season Is over. T h e e x h i b i t Is for tl e F l o o s i e Mr. Liuton ! G e o . Mason H e r b e r t G a r t e r of W h i t e Pigeon, purpose of s h o w i n g t h e g r e a t variety Mrs. L i u t o n Ruth Geary c a m e up yesterday to spend a couple and fine q u a l i t y of f a r m a n d orchard I t a l i a n W o m e n P e d d l e r s , M i l s B . O l t r k a n d Miss of weeks h u n t i n g up t h e river with A . K. A b b o t t p r o d u c t s grown in t h i s vicinity. T h e G. T h o m p s o n and Carl Gasabl. n a m e of t h e grower and t h e n a m e of A t t h e last session of ( t h e board of M a u u f a o t u r e r of a n d d e a l e r i n Mr. and Mrs. H e n r y L a w t o n a n d t h e v a r i e t y Is appended to each exsupervisors JoOO was a p p r o p r i a t e d for Mrs. J o h n P e t e r s o n c a m e up f r o m h i b i t which adds much I n t e r e s t to t h e completion of t h e MontagueMuskegon l a s t week to a t t e n d t h e t h e display. W h i t e h a l l road. T h e $300 will be exf u n e r a l of Paul H a m m o n d . H e r e a f t e r t h r e e of t h e d e p u t y sher- pended u n d e r t h e j o i n t direction of T h e E p w o r t l i L e a g u e business and iffs of t h e c o u n t y will be assigned to t h e supervisors and h i g h w a y comsocial m e e t i n g will he held a t t h e t h e special d u t i e s of g a m e w a r d e n s missioners of W h i t e h a l l a n d Montahome of Miss Lillian K l e t t n e x t Mon- and t h e a p p o i n t i n g of g a m e wardens gue townships. day evening, N o v . 1, at 7:30. b j t h e hoard of supervisors will be T h e r e m a i n s of A l f r e d T l n d a l , who Mr. and Mis. Ben W a d s w o r t h c a m e dispensed w i t h , a n d .Sheriff Nelson Is up f r o m Muskegon S a t u r d a y a n d to have an e x t r a d e p u t y . F r o m now died a t t h e home of his d a u g h t e r in s p e n t S u n d a y a t t h e home of Mrs. W's on. however. Sheriff Nelson says he S h e f o n , P e n n . , arrived h e r e S a t u r p a r e n t s , Mr. and Mrs. J o h n H a n s o n . will m a k e an active c a m p a i g n a g a i n s t day and was t a k e n to t h e home of Nels Mtckelson. T h e f u n e r a l was g Miss Tlllie J o i n e r of C a n a d a , Mrs. a m e law violatois, and desires to In- held S u n d a y a f t e r n o o n f r o m t h e A n n a V a n d e W a t e r and M l s s O r a V a n - form c o u n t y r e s i d e n t s t h a t all g a m e Mlckelson home and I n t e r m e n t took d e W a t e r o f Muskegon, were g u e s t s of la v violations which they may know place In t h e W h i t e h a l l c e m e t e r y . Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Peterson t h i s of should be reported to his office. P l l h n e i e r otllciated. T h e r e m a i n s were If y o n h a v e a n y l u m b e r I c a n m a k e i t i n t o a n y T h e i n f o r m a t i o n thi s secured will be week. t h i n g you m a y wish, p r o m p t l y a n d at lowest prices. used confidentially, and t h e Inform- accompanied here by Mr. and Mrs. A d a m L e u w e r , who h a d an a u c t i o n a n t will n o t be dragged i n t o t h e cas ;. \ d o l p h u s Mlckelson of P o r t V u e and of his household goods and f a r m i n g Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Arnold of S u l l i v a n , he says. tools and s t o c k , will remove to ChiMich. T h e M o n t a g u e business directory cago as soon as affairs a r e s e t t l e d up Mr. T i n d a l was 111 b u t a s h o r t t i m e , which a p p e a r s on t h e last page of t h i s here. i n f l a m a t l o n of t h e bowels being t h e p a p e r Is a new f e a t u r e whloh will n ^ x t to t h e City P a r k , W h i t e h a l l . cause ot his d e a t h H e was 72 years W m . T h i c m a n Is raising and p u t bring those of our m e r c h a n t s and of age and one of t h e e a r l i e s t s e t t l e r s t i n g a new f o u n d a t i o n u n d e r t h e resimechanics, who are n o t otherwise In i b i s p a r t of t h e c o u n t y . He leaves dence of Mrs. Geo. Mason and l a t e r a represented In t h e i r home paper, betwo d a u g h t e r s , Mrs. H a t t l e Arnold of s y s t e m of h o t w a t e r for h e a t i n g will foie t h e people a t homo and abroad S u l l i v a n and Mrs. A d o l p h u s Mlckelbe installed, each week. Every m e r c h a n t and Mrs. D . E. S t a p l e s r e t u r n e d home m e c h a n i c should be represented In son of Sheron, P e n n . T u e s d a y f r o m L e w l s t o n , Maine, where his home paper n o t only for t h e beneC o r d of T h a n k s . she h a s been visiting her b r o t h e r . fit of himself, b u t for t h e good of his We sincerely t h a n k our f r i e n d s and H a r t l e y Lord, d u r i n g t h e p a s t two town and t h e paper. T h e home paper neighbors who so kindly lent t h e i r months. reflects t h e e n t e r p r i s e of its h o m e Sympathy and aid In t h e hour of our J o s e p h Ocobock won second piize m e r c h a n t s and we are proud of t h e b e r e a v e m e n t , als t h e choir for t h e i r services and those who c o n t r i b u t e d a t t h e dairy show In Milwaukee l a s t good s h o w i n g we are able to m a k e for t h e b e a u t i f u l flowers a t t h e f u n e r a l . week for t h e second b e s t test.on c r e a m - M o n t a g u e and her public S p i r i t e d Mrs. C h a r l o t t e H a m m o n d and f a m i l y . Additional Stockholery m i l k . T h e sample was t a k e n f r o m m e r c h a n t s . ders' Liability For Sale—A new delivery wagon, 1 a regular supply f u r n i s h e d t o t h e B u t t e r w o r t h F l o r a l Co buggy, 1 old delivery wagon, 1 pr. bob Conservative, Safe, Strong. Lonsdale c r e a m e r y . W h e n In need of c u t flowers for anv sleighs, 1 swell box c u t t e r , 2setssinv. r T h e m e e t i n g of t h e P r e s b y t e r i a n occasion telephone us and you will be le h a r n e s s . • Geo. S p r i n g e r . W E S O L I C I T YOUR BUSINESS. ladles' society which was postponed s u r e of p r o m p t service, t h e best of ITS A T O P N O T C H D O E R . will be held n e x t Wednesday a t t h e stock a n d t h e lowest price. Special President—M. B. C O V F . L L , V . President—C. O. P I T K I N care t a k e n In t h e m a k i n g up of f u n e r G r e a t deeds compel regard. T h e h o m e of Mrs. J o h n H a n s e n . All al pieces. Give us a t r i a l order and Cashier— G E O R G E E . C O V E L L world crowns Its doers. T h a t ' s why f r i e n d s are i n v i t e d . T h i s will be a let us prove w h a t we say. t h e A m e r i c a n people have crowned Directors B u t t e r w o r t h Floral Co. missionary m e e t i n g . Dr. K i n g ' s New Discovery t h e K l n ^ L a r c h Ave. and J o h n St. M. B. Covell, C. E. Covell. C. G. P i t k i n . Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Gibson r e t u r n e d Muskegon, Mich. of t h r o a t and lung remedies. Every J . J . Gee, a t o m Is a h e a l t h force. I t kills g e r m s August Edlund . T u e s d a y f r o m an e x t e n d e d visit in t h e Citizens P h o n e 1210. and colds and la grippe vanish, i t Upper P e n i n s u l a and Coloma, Wis., heals cough t a c k e d m e m b r a n e s and For R e n t — T h e Allen residence on t h e i r f o r m e r home. T h e i r nephew, Dowllng s t r e e t . E n q u i r e a t thisolffce coughing stops. S o r e r Inflamed bron E. P . C o t t o n of Coloma, accompanied chlal t u b e s a n d lungs a r e cured and h e m o r r h a g e s cease. Dr. Ge. More. t h e m home tor a visit. For Sale—Two new milch cows. Black J a c k , N. C , writes " I t cured E n q u i r e of Nels Mlckelson. me of lung trouble, pronounced hopeLost—A brown woolen lined overless by all d o c t o r s . " 50c and $1.00. coat w i t h ulster collar. F i n d e r please Lost—A gold stick pin, sword shap- T r i a l b o t t l e 10c. G u a r a n t e e d by. L. leave s a m e a t t h i s otMce. ed. F i n d e r please leave a t thlsofllce. G. Ripley & Co. P a y Your Grocer Promptly. Death of Chas. Dean. Chas. C. Dean, who was s t r i c k e n .with paralysis l a s t week Wednesday died Wednesday m o r n i n g shortly a f t e r m i d n i g h t , aged 62 years. He was unconscious nearly all t h e t i m e since being s t r i c k e n , w i t h t h e exception of a few h o u r s when he regained his senses, b u t was u n a b l e to speak. Some t i m e ago M r . Dean lost t h e s i g h t of one of his eyes and a b o u t two years ago had a s l i g h t stroke. Deceased.was one of W h i t e h a l l ' s o l d e s t a n d m o s t respected citizens and a m e m b e r of t h e M. E. c h u r c h . His d e a t h Is universally deplored. He was c o m m a n d e r of N. H . Ferry Post a n d was one of Its most loyal and p a t r i o t i c m e m b e r s . He served t h i e e years in t h e civil war. For several years he has been t h e chief engineer at t h e W a t e r works plant and a r e s i d e n t of W h i t e h a l l for 35 years Me leaves a wife, t h r e e d a u g h t e r s and t w o sons. T h e f u n e r a l will be held from t h e Methodist church Friday a f t e r n o o n at two o'clock. Progress. Iu making new devices f o r locomotion, as well a s in the b a n k i n g business, is made only by e a r n e s t and constant c a r e and effort. T H E STEADY GROWTH OF THIS BANK is an indication of t h e c a r e exercised in the m a n a g e m e n t of its affairs, as well as t h e conservative yet liberal treatm e n t accorded its c u s t o m e r s . a S t o v e t hi s Fall it will p a y y o u to look over our splendid line of Jewell a n d P e n i n s u l a r R a n g e s ai^LHeaters for wood or Coal. S e e our new Oil Heaters. U/ie Sftest at jCoweat !Prices. naiunaiu uu. s W. B. Vorkeller, S a s h , Doors, Interior Finish, Stair Work, P o r c h Material, a n d Mill Work of all kinds. I Plate, Art a n d S h e e t Glass, Ftc. C/)G B i g R e d M i l l , Che State Bank of (Uhiteball Capital Stock $20,000. Surplus 5.000. $20,000. Magazine S u b s c r i p t i o n s t a k e n at t h i s office. UNITY CLUB. T h e W h i t e lake Unity club was entertained at t h e home of Mrs. Matteson last F r i d a y . T h e program, which was In charge of Miss B u c h a n a n , opened w i t h S c r i p t u r e reading by Mrs. Imrle. Morrocoo-Mrs. Matteson Miss Matteson sang very sweetly. "•My Dearest D e a r . " . Fez. capltol of Morroco—Mrs. Hawks. Algirla—Miss Dickinson. City of Tuno-Mrs. S t r e n g . Miss Grlswold rendered two b e a u t i f u l piano solos, "Cradle S o n g " by Gilder. " T o S p r i n g " by Grieg. Roll call—Current Events. T h e club will have a Pot Luck supper a t t h e home of Miss Buchanan, F r i d a y , Oct. 29. C a r d of T h a n k s . to exlend out h e a r t f e l t t h a n k s to our many friends who showed us so much kindness and s y m p a t h y d u r i n g our stay In Montague a t t h e funeral, and burial of our dear f a t h e r and g r a n d f a t h e r : also for t h e b e a u t i f u l flowers, and to t h e choir for sinking. T h e kindness of all shall never be forgotton. Mrs. Maud Mlckelson. Mrs. H a t t l e Arnold and children. Coat Sale 34c per hundred weight paid for We have on h a n d a tew Ladles and claerapples. Custom work on T h u ^ C h i l d r e n ' s c o a t s * h l c b we are almost days. Montague Cider mill. PrusHiving away Ladles long black coats I n g . a t 83 00. Children's warm coats a t Ladd Son S t u d i o of Montague, $1.50 and $2 00. Mrs. M. G. 11 oil is. will be open for business every Saturday and Sunday, commencing Saturday, Oct. 2nd. 1 When You're Ready to Buy | r.umcnuGi^Gi 1 TShe F a r m e r s BanK REPAIRI*. It W i l l H a p p e n sometimes. Breaks are bound to occur. Wise wheelmen make a note oi our address, so t h a t they will know where to call In emergencies. Bicycle Repairs of all kinds made with care and dls p a t c h . Wheels, Tires, Chains, etc., of t h e finest quality always on hand. We are In t h e business for your benefit its well as our profit. In fact we repair everything b u t shoes, clocks and a calloused conscience. O. N. DYBVIG. L. W . & E. P. Mil's, B a n k e r s . — Ceresota Flour is t o o h i g h i n q u a l i t y t o c o m p e t e I t is t o o g o o d to be wasted on in Bread t ::: price, and Biscuits not d e m a n d i n g t h e very best b a k i n g results. I t s g r e a t e r e c o n o m y is p r o v e n in t h e f i r s t l o a f of y o u r b a k e . A s k your grocer for it o r p h o n e 139. J o h n s o n J'eed Co. \ Distributers for Ceresota. ' T o r Y o u n g ;ind O l d tlie Best F l o u r Sold,• . W e Are Ready TO F I L L YOUR E V E R Y WANT IN School Supplies Our Stock is c o m p l e t e , of the highest g r a d e and p r i c e s strictly right. So come to the reliable s t o r e for your Books, Tablets, Pens, Pencils, Stationery, etc., etc. L G. RIPLEY & CO. Druggists and Stationers, MONTAGUE, MICH. SPEAXER CANNON ROASTS FOES. THE MONTAGUE OBSERVER.P r a c t i c a l l y H. C. FLOTEN, Publisher. MICHIGAN. MONTAGUE. buhmary op t h e MOST DfPOETANT NEWS. Sunday. Mobi In London, Paris, and other European cities and In Havana. Cuba, protested against Ferrer's execution. William I. Buchanan, former .minister to Argentina and director of the Pan-American exposition, died In a London i t r e e t Governor Shallenberger of Nebraska declared that the federal Judges who •et aside the bank guaranty law are political puppets. Charles E. Magoon. former provisional governor of Cuba, denied the report that he will be appointed minister to China to aucceed C. R. Crane. Monday. President Taft retired to his brother's ranch for four days of rest. Missouri Democrats opened an active campaign to get Folk nominated for President. Daniel D. Davlea was ousted as Chicago Immigration Inspector for padding expense vouchers. The report from Madrid was that Premier Maura was near a fall, as Alfonso was angry because he did not have a chance to pardon Ferrer. Gary, Ind., became a city amid bloodshed and riota, following the nomination of ex-Mayor W. C. Crollus of Jollet for office over Thomas E. Knotts. . F. E. Hanscome, cashier of the wrecked Mineral Point, Wis., bank, committed suicide on his parents' grave and his mother-in-law dropped dead on hearing the news. Tuesday. Cesare Lombroso, the ^poted Italian criminologist, died at Turon. The people of Peoria and other Illinois valley towns demand a real deep waterway without politics. An official of Framlngham, Mass., declared that the forgeries against that town amount to 5326,000. President James McCrea announced the Pennusylvanla system probably will begin work soon on a 125,000,000 station In Chicago. Wednesday. A Kansas farmer, wife and sisterin-law were victims of an unknown assassin. A flght Is reported to have been begun to depose McCarran, ill Brooklyn Democratic leader. Knud Rasmussen said that the Eskimos believe and convinced him that Cook reached the pole. Boston financial men want some kind of reform which will give more elasticity to the currency system. Chicago's supremacy In the theater world shown by new projects; a playhouse to cost |500,000 wll be built In Clark street, near Madison; site bought for another Is to cost |1,000,000. Thursday. A participant In the primary riot at Gary, Ind., was found murdered on the principal street. A man believed to have been Francis Schlatter, the "divine healer," died at Hastings, Neb. The Maura cabinet fell In Spain and Senor Moret, former premier, organized a new ministry. The American Federation of Labor will work for the establishment of a cabinet post for tollers. Robert S. Lovebt was elected president of the Union Pacific Railroad, to succeed the late Edward H. Harrlman. Illinois cnayors declined to indorse the commission plan of government, but asked the Legislature to pass laws giving cities option by referendum. Benjamin Brockmeyer, a wealthy dairyman of Lyons, 111., was found In his wagon murdered, and hils brother and hired man are held as suspects, with a horse the principal witness In the mystery. Mrs. Mary A. Yerkes. widow of the Chicago street car magnate, confirmed the report in New York that the three years of litigation over the estate is at an end and an agreement out of court has practically been reached. Friday. The Southern storm death list numbered fifty-five. Two Italian children kidnaped In S t Louis were found wandering In Chicago. Rioting was renewed In many European capitals aa the result of Ferrer's execution. Saturday. A new ruling lets pulp from Canada in free, with some exceptions. ' Presidents Taft and Diaz met on American and Mexican soli; Diaz gave a state banquet. Willie Boy, Indian outlaw, killed himself on a mountain top with last shot after defying posses for weeka. Police dogs routed a Paris mob demonstrating In sympathy of Ferrer and prevented the wrecking of the Church of the Sacred H e a r t Captain Schoubye, skipper of the Danish government's arctic yacht, got the story of the finding of the north pole by Dr. Cook from the two Eskimos who accompanied the explorer on his final dash. NOTES OP CURRENT EVENTS. Flr« In the lumber yard of Manley Chew, at DolUrtown, Ont.. destroyed 76.000,000 feet of lumber, with a loss of $1,000,000. County Attorney Clark of Coffeyvllle Kan., was seriously Injured by men who resented a raid on contraband whisky sellers. Robert Bradbury fell from a akyscraper near Broad and Chestnut streets In Philadelphia and wa« killed in sight of hundreds of pedestrians He was 66 years old and a veteran oofr the Civil War. Roads La Follette and Cummins Out of Republican P a r t y . Speaker Joseph G. Cannon opened fire on the Republican insurgents Tuesday evening In an address before the Illinois Mayors' Association at the Elgin Opera House. Senator Cummins of Iowa and Senator La Follette of W i s c o n s i n and their f o l l o w e r s practically w e r e read out of the JOSEPH o. CAHXON.party. Speaker Cannon .defended himself against the charges of czar rule and branded as false the report that six of the Illinois representatives will Join the revolt against him. Vigorous denial was made of the assertion that his election as Speaker was brought about through a deal with Tammany. W. J. Bryan was—dealt with In blistering terms and was declared to be twofaced In his attitude on the House rules. Representative Fowler of New Jersey, who recently attacked the Speaker, came In for Incidental mention. Mr. Fowler's refusal to report to the House the emergency currency measure was given by Intimation as the reason for dropping him as chairman of the currency and banking committee. The new tariff act was characterized as the best ever passed In the history of the country. Speaker Cannon spoke for nearly two hours, devoting his entire time to subjects relating to Congress. More than 1,200 people were in the audience. C^HNTVAL HONORS PORTOLA. W a r Ships of Five Nations J o i n in W e l c o m i n g Discoverer. Rejoicing over her rehabilitation after almost complete dlstruction by earthquake and fire. San Francisco has been making merry with guests summoned from all the world to participate In the festivities of a carnival week. Ostensibly to commemorate the discovery of San Francisco Bay by Don Caspar de Portola, the celebration In reality Is more In honor of those who have rebuilt a greater city on the ruins of the old. Having boarded the revenue cutter Golden Gate and gone outside the bay at dawn. Don Caspar de Portola. Impersonated by Nicholas Coverrublas. a descendant of the Spanish settlers of the State, with his guard of honor, entered the Golden Gate soon after 10 o'clock to the booming of guns from the forts and assembled ships of war. Immediately south of the Fairway, occupied by the American fleet, lay his British majesty's fieet Next to the British war craft were anchored the Japanese. Italian, Netherlands and German cruisers. Scarcely had the roar from the saluting guns died away when Don Gaspar was greeted by the deafening cheers of the throng lining the docks. When he set foot on shore he was met by the regular soldiers and sailers detailed to act as his escort and the members of the Portola reception committee. Following the parade the toast proposed by President Taft to the rebuilt city was drunk. Don Gaspar was then presented to Queen VIrgllla, who was to reign during the festival. GOSSIP GIVES MITRDER CLTJE, One Told ' ' S e c r e t " at P a r t y and Dr. George A. F r i t c h W a s Arrested. Women's gossip is responsible for a new development In the Mabelle Millman murder mystery In Detroit It was at a tea party In Michigan avenue a woman said: "I know a woman who could tell a whole lot about Dr. Fritch If she wanted to." She answered under a pledge of darkest secrecy t^at this woman was Mrs. Anthony Doemer of 319 Michigan avenue. Some one sent an anonymous letter to Sheriff Gaston and some one else sent one to Captain McDonnell of the police, and William Jansen, with an eye to the $1,000 reward, gave Prosecutor Van Zile direct hints. All this caused the reassembling of a special grand Jury. Mrs. Doemer was questioned and gave Information that led to the rearrest of Dr. George A. Fritch and to the detention of his chauffeur, "Chris" Leach. When the chauffeur got Into a cell he broke down and told about carrying three bags of something to the river near Ecorse and throwing them In. It was near Ecorse that the dlsmembeVed parts of Miss Mlllman's body were found. COINERS WORK IN CAPITAL. T u r n i n g Out Bogus Coin Almost in Shadow of T r e a s u r y . Counterfeiters, working almost In the shadow of the treasury, have invaded certain districts of Washington, D. C., with spurous coin. The counterfeits are of the 25-cent and 10-cent coinage patterned after the Issue of 1908, but according to the secret-service operatives they are poor imitations. Chief Operator George F. Proctor has taken personal charge of the Investigation and several operatives are seeking the source of the coinage. So far as the authorities have discovered. there are not many of the counterfeits In circulation there, but there are enough to convince the secret-service people that the counterfeiters have their headquarters In the national capital, and it Is thought that they may be putting out their product elsewhere through confederates. Chlcnsonn End* Life lu Hotel. A traveling man of about 35 years, registering under the name of "H. T. Smith, Chicago," was found dead In his room at the Chittenden Hotel In Columbus, Ohio, shot through the head by his own hand. Killed In D u l l e r C x p l o a l o n . Seven persons were killed and three Injured when a boiler in the Griffin Lumber Company sawmill exploded at Griffin. Ark. Mrs. J. C. Reed, wife ol the superintendent of the mill, waa among those Injured. TAFT AND DIAZ MEET T H E GLAD HAND ON T H E MEXICAN BORDER. DIPLOMAT DEES IN LONDON. Great P o m p and Ceremony Mark Exchange of Courtesies on Both Sides of Border. THEY CONVERSE IN PRIVATE Each R u l e r Is Host to Accompaniment of Booming Guns and C l a n k i n g of Sabers. Pomp and pageantry, the boom of cannon, the blare of trumpets, the clanking of sabers, the glitter of dazzling uniforms—these formed the setting Saturday for the long-awaited meeting between President Taft and President Porfirio Diaz of Mexico, the executive heads of America's two greatest republics. It was a dramatic moment In tho history of the two countries. In outward splendor it suggested the Field of the Cloth of Gold, the greatest pageant of all history, when In 1520 Henry VIII., tho much-married monarch of England, met Francis I. of France In the Valley of Audrey. In the actual handclasp of the two executives, however, and in tho exchange of greetings—In the actual expressions of the good will and friendship between the two nations, for which the outward glitter and glamour was but the frame—simple but cordial informality reigned. Two cities on the border, the long bridge across the Rio Grande and EI Chamizal, a strip of neutral territory, formed the scene of this International spectacle. The action alternated between El Paso, famous in the days of the eld Santa Fe trail, and the quaint little City of Cludad Juarez, Mexico. It was the second time that a President of the United States had gone outside his country during his term of office. Theodore Roosevelt having set the precedent when he stepped on the soil of the He ubllc of Panama. It was the first i...ie that President Diaz ever left the boundaries of his country, and to Co It special sanctlou had to be granted by the Mexican Congress. A special train was built to convey the Mexican President to the border, and for the time being Cludad Juarez became the Mexican capital. In El Paso President Diaz, after driving up to the International border In an enormtfiis gilt carriage of state with solid gold hubs and trimmings. was welcomed by American bands, which played "La Paloma," the Mexican national anthem, to the rattle of castanets by the trap drummers. In Cludad Juarez President Taft on his two trips across the Rio Grande rode through banks of cheering and shouting Mexicans, who sang "America." The actual meeting between the two Presidents was witnessed by fewer than a score of persons—only the personal staffs of the two principals. After greetings were over. President T a f t and President Diaz withdrew Into an Inner room of the chamber of commerce of El Paso, where the historic meeting occurred, and In a long conference were attended only by Governor Creel of the State of Chihuahua, former ambassador to the United States, who acted as Interpreter. At 5:30 o'clock President Taft crossed the Rio Grande to Juarez for the second time, and was guest of honor at a banquet which for splendor of appoIntmeiU was probably the most notable state feast ever served on tho American continent INDIAN BANDIT FOUND DEAD. CASHIER IS A SUICIDE, Official of Wrecked Wisconsin B a n k E n d s Life Brooding Over Crash. F. E. Hanscom, cashier of the wrecked First ^National Bank of Mineral Point, Wis., shot and killed himself at 10 o'clock Sunday night. Hanscom's body was Immediately removed to the home of his mother-in-law, Mrs. John Gray. At sight of the lifeless body Mrs. Gray dropped dead. Since the failure of the bank Hanscom has been working night and day and was despondent over his troubles. Mr. Hanscom was a brother-in-law of Phil Allen, Jr., vice president of the bank, for the alleged misuse of whose funds Allen was arrested Friday. The bank, for a generation regarded as one of the strongest In southwestern Wisconsin, was closed a few days ago after a week's investigation of the books by Bank Examiner Goodhart. An attempt was made to keep the institution on its feet by the sale of mining property in which Allen was Interested, but the deal fell. through. It was alleged that the bank had been looted of $200,000 by means of notes forged by Allen. Allen's chief aid In running the bank was Hanscom. The vice president became seriously 111 when the bank was closed, and Hanscom devoted every minute of his time in assisting Examiner Goodhart in straightening out the books. When Receiver Sohofield took charge Thursday rumors, which could not be confirmed, had It that the loss to depositors would run greatly over $200,000 and that arrests in addition to that of Allen were to be expected. r>__^ BANK ROBBERS HOLD U P POSSE Covering Pursuing Party with Rifles They Flee w i t h Loot. Five masked bandits, who robbed the State Bank of MInocqua, Wis., of several thousand dollars early Wednesday morning, held up the pursuing posse of sheriffs, which surrounded them in the depot at Hazelhurst, a few miles south of there, and then escaped eastward to a near-by Junction. The posse had been hunting for the four masked bandits all day. At 7:30 o'clock In the evening the bandits came out of the woods and took refuge In the railway station at Hazelhurst. They were discovered In the station by the village marshal, who swore in several deputies and then ordered the bandits to surrender. Immediately the muzzles of several rifles were pointed through the door and windows of the station and then the masked robbers came out, still covering their pursuers. Backing the posse into the middle of the street they again escaped to the woods, while they kept their pursuers covered. Willie Boy of P i u t e Tribe E n d s Life t o Avoid Capture. Willie Boy, the Piute Indian desperado, for whom three armed posses have been searching the San Bernardino desert was found dead Friday on the summit of the Bullion Mountain, where he had been making his final stand. He had killed himself with the last shot In his rifle and had been dead several days. Willie B 0 / made his stand on the mountain against the pursuing posse of Sheriff Ralph's on the afternoon of Oct. 6. after being relentlessly pursued for ten days. On Sept. 26. Willie Boy murdered Mike Boniface, an aged Indian and fled with the latter's 15-year-old daughter. Four days later the girl's dead body was found. She had been beaten and finally murdered when she beca.me exJake de Rlsler, the world's champion, hausted. During the battle on Bul- broke the five-mile motor cycle rccord lion Mountain. Willie Boy forced the at the Clifton stadium as Passaic, N. J. posse to abandon the attack until rePlans arc being discussed by Wisinforcements were secured. consin-Illinois magnates for a reorganization of the league during the winter. TAG DAY BRINGS $40,000. Dos Moines won the Western League pennant by a margin of two points, tho Clilcafco C h n r l d e N W i l l R e c e i v e H e l p closest pennant race In the history of TlirouKh Collection*. Proceeds of Chicago's second annual the Western League. Walter Demara. of San Francisco, tag day are estimated at 540,000, half won six-day eight-hour bicycle as much again as was realized last race attheKansas City. Ho rode a total of year. The collections, however, were 969 miles and two laps. made in behalf of three times as many Affliction, a 15 to 1 chance, won the societies as were concerned last year, Occidental Handicap, defeating Sam and the fund each organization will Hildreth's Fltzherbert by a length. The receive will be smaller. The Marga- filly was In the lead all of the way. ret Etter creche, the Boys' Shelter Sam Hlldreth. the owner of a classy Club and the Illinois Children's Home string of racers, has been among the and Aid Society reaped the largest most popular turfmen this season. funds, approaching $4,000 each. Fig- Many of the big stakes have been won ures for the other organizations vary by his steeds and It is generally believed that he will clean up $80,000 this between $1,500 and $3,500.* season. L-WaM-J TWO TRY TO HOLD UP BANK. Caihlor Flre« eape wltb n t l l n n d l f a , AVhu E « I'o^we I n I ' a r a a l t . The police are searching for two men who Tuesday afternoon entered the bank at West Manchester, Ohio, and attempted to hold up Cashier J. Warren Leas. Leas fired two shots at the men, who ran from the bank. The bandits drove toward Dayton in a buggy with a posse in buggies and automobiles in pursuit. They abandoned their rig near Dayton, and eluded their pursuers by taking to the fields. A. F. Kammer won tho annual golf championship of Staten Island by defeating O. L. Williams. 7 up and 6 to go, on the links of the Richmond Country Club. J. R. Keene's Wlmbona II. captured the Lambourn Welter handicap of 250 sovereigns for 3-year-olds and upwards, at seven furlongs, at Nedbury. England. A project Is being discussed among members of the major leagues to establish a home for ball players who are "down and out." The Idea is to set aside 1 per cent of league receipts until sufficient funds are realized to establish a uiodcsi retreat. SOUTH BEND WOMAN FREED. W. L Buchanan, Formerly Minister to P a n a m a , F o u n d Senseless. W. I. Buchanan, formerly United States Minister to Panama, was discovered in an unconscious condition at midnight Saturday in Park Lane, London, and removed to S t George's Hotel, where he died shortly afterward. He was In evening dress, and it is believed his death was due to an apoplectic stroke. Mr. Buchanan arrived In London from Paris the previous Thursday, and called at the American Embassy. He then seemed in good health and spirits, and at no time showed any symptoms of apoplexy. Mr. Buchanan la credited with being responsible for the continuation of the anti-Castro regime in Venezuela. He was in London to assist in floating bonds for Governor Gomez. Mr. Buchanan has appeared in most every important issue between the United States and Mexican and South American republics for the last fifteen years. He was the first United States Minister to Panama, Minister to Argentine, Brazil, special commissioner to Venezuela. arbitrator between Chile and Argentine, and performed a half dozen other diplomatic functions. He cooperated with Secretary Root in the latter's mission to the South American States. Mr. Buchanan came into notice more than twenty years ago as the builder of the corn palace at the Sioux City exposition. When Castro's government was tottering Mr. Buchanan was selected to ^yrop up the Gomez government. He succeeded and also In bringing to a settlement and arbitration the five great claims of United States citizens against Venezuela. Mr. Buchanan was also prominently connected with the preliminary negotiations among tho Southern republics which led to the peace conference of 1907 at Washington. Mrs. Lena B. Mason Quickly Cleared in Attempted Murder Case. Mrs. Leona B. Mason was found not guilty in South Bend, Ind., of attempting to murder John W. Talbot, Supremo President of the Order of Owls, last March. The Jury was ready to report In sixteen minutes. In anticipation of a quick verdict the crowd which packed the courtroom during the closing arguments refused to leave and every Inch of space was occupied when the Jury announced that It had agreed upon a verdict. The defendant KIDNAPED CHILDREN FOUND. and her sisters smiled when they heard the verdict, but there was no Chicago Police Hold Viviano Boy demonstration either by them or by and Girl Stolen f r o m St. Louis. the spectators. Tomaso and Grace Viviano, children Opinion is general that the story kidnaped In St. Louis last July and told by Mrs. Mason on the stand, in which she charged Talbot with perse- held for a $25,000 ransom, have been found wandering, abandoned, on the cution for six years, won the symstreets of Chicago. Sneering from expathy of the Jury. The defense was emotional Insanity. Charles A. Davey posure and with a well developed atIn closing for the defense delivered a tack of pneumonia the little girl was two hour arraignment of Talbot and taken to tho Passavant Hospital and his associates. He asked the Jury for placed In the care of physicians. The child cries constantly when her cousan unqualified acquittal on the first ballot, declaring that by so doing It in Is out of sight, and to keep her conwould place the stamp of disapproval tented the boy also has been quartered on such men as he asserted Talbot to at the hospital. Captain John Rehm of the Chicago avenue police station be. wired the parents of the kidnaped chilECKELS ESTATE IS INSOLVENT. dren. Peter and Justlna Viviano, in S t Louis. Immediately after the discovery of F i n a n c i e r ' s Debts Exceed ^1,000,000 the Identity of the children detectives —Value of P r o p e r t y Only Half. from central, Chicago avenue, and the Presentation to Judge Cutting in the Hudson avenue stations were detailed Probate Court In Chicago of more than to search the neighborhood where they $250,00 worth of claims against the were found In an effort to capture the estate of the late James H. Eckels revealed the Insolvency of the estate of kidnaper. No trace of the custodians the former Comptroller of the Curren- of the boy and girl or place of custody cy, Who, at the time o t his death was ho.-, been discovered. Though oppearpresident of the Commercial National fflg to have been fed well—but not Bank and one of the foremost finan- comfortably clothed — both children have been frightened Into silence and, ciers of the nation. Claims totaling more than $750,000 It was with difficulty they were perhad already been allowed against this suaded to talk. It Is desired that several strange estate, and the prospect of carrying this total over the $1,000,000 mark features ln connection with the case seemed completely to wipe ou the ap- will be cleared up. It having been reproximate total of $500,000 worth of ported at St. Louis that the VIvlanos assets shown by the Inventory In the recently had paid $2,500 of the $25,000 estate. The original petition for the ransom demanded by the kidnapers. appointment of administrators placed the value of the estate at only $150,FLAG GOES TO PITTSBURG. 000. By far the largest portion of the claims which have been filed In the Champion Baseball Club of World probate court Is for money advanced by D e f e a t i n g D e t r o i t to the dead banker as personal loans, Pittsburg, four times winner of the and many of them recite In detail stock and bond transactions In which National League pennant became the champion baseball team of the world he was Involved. Saturday afternoon, when Its husky atlrtetes routed Detroit by the score of BANK GUARANTY LAW INVALID. 8 to 0, In the seventh and deciding contest of the series. This victory N e b r a s k a Measure F a t a l l y H i t by keeps the big flag In the parent league Supreme Bench Decision. for the third year, Detroit having The Nebraska bank guaranty law. thrice failed to wrest the biggest honenacted by the last Legislature, Is In- or that goes with baseball from the valid, the federal court deciding Sat- National Leacue pennant winners. urday. Judges Vendeventer and T. C. Fred Clarke's fighting band of pirates Munger at Lincoln handed down a de- put up the game of their life, and cision affirming the decision of the their reward Is that they have belower court and making permanent come monarchs of tho diamond. The the temporary injunction granted by wlldness of the opposing pitchers, Donthe district court preventing the law ovan and Mullln, coupled with terrific from going Into operation. drives, won the hard-earned victory. "I shall not say whether I will call an extra session for the enactment of TRADE AND INDUSTRY. another law or not until I have read Hogs have been Celling for $8.71 per the decision," said Gov. Shallenberger weight at Paola, Kan., the when .told of the decision. "If the de- hundred highest price they have brought for cision points out the weak points of years. The prices were due to compethe law, and they appear to be fatal I tition of hog buyer? In that part of the may call an extra session." Some State. weeks ago the Governor said emphatControl of the United Railways Comically If the decision was against the pany and the Ruth Trust Company, of law he would reconvene the Legisla- Portland, Ore., was purchased by J, H. Hulbert, of Fontanelle, Iowa, and C. L, ture to enact a new law. Dunbar, of Vancouver, B. C. The purTITLE TO OHIO OFFICE SETTLED. chase price was close to $5,000,000. The Senate committee, which has J . c . Morrla' App«>l"<nient to State been touring tho Northwest for the purpose of visiting the Irrigation proRailroad Coinmlaaloner llletrnl. Appointment of J. C. Morris as a jects. are thoroughly pleased with the member of the Ohio Railroad Commis- work of reclamation and are In favor sion by Governor Andrew L. Harris, of extending the sdrVlce along this line. Just before he retired from office, the The extensive development of Iron change to take effect after Harris' suc- ores In Ashland County. Wisconsin, Is cessor, Judson Harmon, had assumed reviving and Is pressed to the front by office, was of no legal effect. Such Is the projection of a railroad spur Into the decision of the Supreme Court, the low grade beds comprising the handed down In the case brought by Guest and Penokee mines, recently Morris to recover the office from John abandoned. At a special election held in NorthSullivan after the latter had assumed It on a subsequent appointment by field, Minn., the Northfleld Telephone Company,' which Is composed entirely Governor Harmon. The demurrer of of neighboring farmer stockholders, Morris to the answer of the defendant. won a franchise by a vote of 308 to 175. Sullivan, is overruled and the petition The victory is the culmination of a four years' effort of Morris Is dismissed. Egyptians are awakening to modern Enarlne F a l l a j One Is K i l l e d . methods in agriculture. American Vice One man was killed and two were Consul Frederic W. Cauldwell. of Cairo, severely Injured by the derailment of writes that steam ploivs have found a switch engine near Daytons Bluff, great popularity In E g y p t During the Minn. The engine ran off the east end last six years 150 sets of a patent of the new bridge, fell down a twelve- steam plow of a British make have been Imported. foot embankment, and stopped on the During tho harvest season Just closed edge of the river. 15,850.000 pounds of binder twine were sold by the Stillwater. Minn.. State A t t e m p t to Kob Dnnk Fall*. Two men attempted to rob the First prison. Of this amount 1,-954,000 pounds sold outside of the State, under National Bank In Shakopee, Minn., were the law passed two years ago permitearly the other day, but were fright- ting the sale of prison twine to other ened away before they could get into States. North and South Dakota and the safe, which contained $20,000. Wisconsin were among the purchasers. CHICAGO. Dun's Review, published by R. (I. Dun & Co., says: "Trading defaults exhibit some increase above the normal, but a high daily average of payments through the banks is In evidence and the Industrial conditions testify to sustained progress in production and distribution. "New demands form a notably large aggregate for Iron and steel, with prices for foundry supplies firmer for distant deliveries. Rolling mills ha*» ample contracts for steady day and night work until next spring. Contracts for structural materials and involving rather large tonnages are under negotiation. "Stormy weather and the Columbus holiday Interrupted movements of commodities, factory outputs, grain and flour, and the markets for breadstuffs were quieter than In previous weeks, but live stock arrivals gained modevately and there were larger shipments of corn and provisions. The approaching close of lake navigation causes more rush for vesels to move mine and forest products.- and the freight rate for grain to Buffalo rose to the highest this seasonr "Earnings of the Chicago steam roads sustain favorable comparison with former high gross, and there Is much Installation of new rolling stock and planning for track extensions and other Improved facilities to meet expanding demands of transportation. "I-pwer temperatures stimulated wider activity In general merchandise here and throughout the Interior. Stocks undergo seasonable reduction in the leading retail lines, especially of heavy clothing, blankets, woolens, housewares and food products. "Bank clearings. $260,353,148. exceed those of the corresponding week In 1908 by 9.5 per cent, and compare with $269,577,109 In 1907. "Failures reported in the Chicago district number 36, against 24 last week, 21 in 190S and 18 in 1907. Those with liabilities over $5,000 number 10, • against 7 last week, 2 In 1908 and 5 in 1907." NEW YORIi. I n ^ ^ ^ ^ L - n t Is the order of the day In t ^ ^ ^ ^ R l I e c t i o n s and industry. F r e e z i n ^ ^ m p e r a t u r e , light snows, or killing frosts, coupled with freer crop movement, have helped retail trade and collections at the West and Northwest, while lower temperatures and high prices and free marketing of cotton have helped distribution at the south. Jobbing trade has been colncldently benefited by reordering to fill broken stocks, and the distributive trade side accordingly presents a favorable appearance. Trade at first hands feels the stimulus' In more confident buying .for spring, though the unsettlement In Ihe goods trade, due to high cost of material and talk of curtailment, still retards trade In this line. However, the tendency of cotton goods Is undeniably upward, and buying appears sughtly more confident at the higher prices asked. From Industrial lines the same story of full order books and of longer hours now comes, payrolls are expanding, and available skilled labor is reported closely employed, with less Idleness noted than for two years past. Business failures In the Unltfcd States for the week ending with Oct 11, were 222, against 203 last week; 244 In the same week of 1908; 207 In 1907; 170 In 1906, and 178 In 1905.— Bradstreefs. Chicago—Cattle, common to prime, $4.00 to $8.90; hogs, prime heavy, $4.50 to $7.85; sheep, fair to choice, $4.25 to $5.25; wheat. No. 2, $1.17 to $1.19; corn. No. 2, 59c to 61c; oats, standard, 37c to 39c: rye. No. 2, 73c to 75c; hay, timothy. $8.00 to $14.50; prairie, $8.00 to $13.50; butter, choice creamery, 27o to 30c; eggs, fresh. 20c to 25c; potatoes. per bushel. 45c to 55c. Indianapolis—Cattle, shipping, $3.00 to $7.50; hogs, good to choice heavy, $3.50 to $7.85; sheep, good to choice, $2.50 to §4.50; wheat. No. 2, $1.20 to $1.23; corn. No. 2 white, 60c to 61c; oats. No. 2 white, 39c to 40c. St. Louis—Cattle. $4.00 to $8.50; hogs, $4.00 to $7.75; sheep, $3.00 to $4.75; .wheat, No. 2, $1.26 to $1.28; corn. No. 2, 60c to 61c; oats. No. 2, 38c to 39c; rye. No. 2, 71c to 72c. Detroit—Cattle, $4.00 to $5.25; hogs, $4.00 to $7.50; sheep, $2.50 to $4.00; wheat. No. 2, $1.23 to $1.24; corn. No. 2 yellow. 63c to 6r»c; oats, standard, 40c to 42c; rye. No. 1, 75c to 77c. Cincinnati—Cattle, $4.00 to $6.35; hogs, $4.00 to $7.50; sheep, $3.00 to $4.25; wheat. No. 2, $1.25 to $1.28; corn. No. 2 .mixed, 61c-to 63c; oats. No. 2 mixed, 40c to 52c; rye. No. 2, 77c to 78c. New York—Cattle. $4.00 to $7.00; hogs, $4.00 to $8.00; sheep. $3.00 to $4.50; wheat. No. 2 red. $1.20 to $1.21; corn. No. 2. 68c to 69c; oats, natural white, 43c to 40c; butter, creamery, 27c to 31c; eggs, western, 27c to s8c. Milwaukee—Wheat, No. 2 northern. $1.05 to $1.08; corn. No. 3, 57c to 59c: oats, standard, 39c to 41c: rye. No. 1, 72c to 74c; barley, standard, 65c to 66c; pork, mess, $23.75. Buffalo — Cattle, choice shipping steers, $4.00 to $7.00; hogs, fair to choice, $4.00 to $7.90; sheep, common to good mixed, J4.00 to $5.50; lambs, fair to choice, $4.00 to $7.75. Toledo—Wheat No. 2 mixed. $1.23 to $1.24; corn. No. 2 mixed. 62c to 64c; oats. No. 2 mixed, 40c to 42c; rye. No. 2, 75o to 77c; clover seed. $8.90. t h i r t y thousand cases of It in Rouma- T H E N E W T A R I F F BOARD. nia. In certain parts of Italy from THE MONTAGUE OBSERVER,one-third to one-half of t h e populaH. C. F L O T E N , P u b l i s h e r . MONTAGUE, MICHIGAN. The next man who goes to the North Pole will take a white notary public with him. A f f l n l t j Earle says he U tired of America. America laid it first of Afflnlty Earle. In the m a t t e r of contributing to the caaualty list the airship will do Its full share. The cotton crop Is so short t h a t one might think the speculators had done the hoeing this season. **A B t Louis widow declares good husbands are hard to find." How many does she wantT The geographies will have to be rerlsed and that means more dividends for the school book trust. An Indiana editor has suddenly Inherited $400,000. Now he can bring out his poems In book form. A oure for the sleeping sickness Is repoiHed. F a t h e r used to bo the cure, when the boys suffered from It. \ tion Is suffering from It; and in Spain It Is said t h a t two persons out of every hundred have I t The disease has been known In Spain since 1735, and In Italy since 1750. It was flrst noted In the United States In Georgia a f t e r the Influx of Italians had begun. During the present summer cases have been reported in Massachusetts. In IInols—there are said to be a hundred and flfty cases in an Insane asylum In that State—in North Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi. When the disease in the Illinois insane asylum was diagnosed as pellagra, the use of corn as food was stopped. Pellagra has not hitherto been prevalent In America, It Is supposed, for the reason that the climate Is better suited to raising and preserving corn than that of southern Europe. It has been suggested t h a t one cause of its appearance here lies in the consumption of corn t h a t has been sent to m a r k e t before it is thoroughly dry. Such corn heats In the cars, but it is ground up a s cattle feed, and doubtless some of it gets into the kitchens. There is no need for any one to be seriously alarmed over the matter, for the average American family eats so many other things besides corn that It Is in little danger of contracting the disease. rjiLf FACTOR A man with a bald head was shot by a boy h u n t i n g turtles. Moral: If you're shy on hair, don't masquerade as a turtle. As f u r t h e r evidence that there a r e two sides to every question, a woman's anti-suffrage association has been started In New York. Lovers a r e getting more Impatient •very day. One In Pennsylvania shot himself becaufle his sweetheart didn't come down stairs on time. Wrangell Land, which lies well with In t h e Arctic Ocean, Is an eminently fitting pl^ce for Cook and Peary to meet and settle t h e i r dispute. Love making Is going to be easier this winter. The waist line Is to be moved to Its proper position, where It may be located without difficulty. For a woman who confesses t h a t •he Is not less than 12,000 years old, Mrs. Annie Bessant Is t h e best preserved person of her sex now In captivity. V = Anna Besant says the coming man will be seven feet tall. It will flatter ex-Vice-President F a i r b a n k s to have t h e coming man fashioned a f t e r his own style of architecture. If one Is at all inclined to talk, the North Pole controversy offers fully as fascinating an opening as the American tariff. It Is not necessary to be hampered by much exact knowledge in either case. A Clean Month. Now and then one hears Incredible stories of persons, otherwise apparently Intelligent and cleanly, going round for months, and even years, with their mouths full of germ-laden, aching, decaying teeth. These persons will give the most ridiculous reasons for their uncleanly folly. They are too busy, or they have an Insane dread of the dentist, or some such nonsense. In the very poor and very Ignorant all this may be understood and forgiven, b u t in other classes it Is unpardonable. Luckily their number Is small, and their punishment Is sure. Very few of those who are children to-day will be able to say by and by t h a t they suffer on account of neglect of their teeth In youth, but many a d u l t s can honestly say so now. The science of dentistry and the mechanics by means of which t h a t science Is applied have made enormous strides of late, and will undoubtedly continue to advance in the f u t u r e . The modern germ theory of disease as applied to the mouth and teeth has brought about so much exact knowledge of prevention and cure t h a t soon - J K Q A rtlsorQ/ia TEXAS' When the Texas Legislature appropriated $10,000 for a monument to General Sam Houston, to be erected over his grave at Huntsvllle. it stipulated that the monument should be of Texas granite and t h a t the appropriation should become void S(?pt 1, 1909. Oddly enough, writes H. B. Chamberlain In the Chicago Record-Herald, sculptors eager to Secure the honor of making the monument neglected to inform themselves of essential conditions and submitted plans for monuments to be developed in bronze. Until Aug. 1, Just one short month before the expiration of the allotted time, but one plan In accordance with ideas expressed In the measure m a k i n g the appropriation had been presented. T hi s plan, by F r a n k Telch of Llano, proposed the erection of a plain shaft. Another sculptor. Pompeo Copplni of San Antonio, who had designed a bronze monument, was given a second opportunity by Governor Campbell to prepare new plans for one of granite. Sam Houston was born in Virginia of Irish-Scotch stock. His father, who died when he was a lad of 13, served In the Revolutionary War, and a t Its close was appointed Major and Assistant Inspector General of frontier troops. He has been described as a man of large frame, commanding presence, indomitable courage, and a passion for military life. The mother was also remarkable for her magnificent physique and forceful character. After her husband's death she removed with her family of six sons and three daughters to Tennessee, then the frontier, where white pioneers came into close contact with savage life. The education gained in a few months at an old field school was necessary rudimentary. This, with a session or two at the Academy of Maryville, was all the schooling that the man destined to be Governor of two States. President of a republic. Congressman and United States Senator ever had. The command of strong, dignified and stirring English, which was his. must have been due to the quality of his reading, for he was a man of few books. As a boy he devoured Pope's translation of t h e Iliad. When In command of the Texas a r m y he studied Caesar's Commentaries, as did Miles Standlsh. an Indian fighter of an earlier day. Later he read and appreciated Shakespeare and perused the Bible so constantly that Its phraseology tinged his oratory. Fven the former president of Harvard .. 1j t h a i his choice of books was good. When the war between England and the United States broke out. young Houston marched away with the Tennessee Volunteers as ensign. To punish the Creeks for the massacre at Fort Himi, Ala., volunteer troops under Jackson and Coffee were sent to Alabama. Houston's regiment was with them, and at To-ho-pe-ka. the most hotly contested battle ever fought by Indians against disciplined white soldiers. he displayed such conspicuous courage as to win General Jackson's lifelong friendship. He was promoted to a lientenantcy for his bravery, and when his wounds, which never entirely healed, permitted him to report for duty, he was sent as agent to the Cherokee Indians. While In Washington on business connected with the sale of Cherokee lands he was rebukefi for appearing before Calhoun, Secretary of War, In Indian costume Instead of In his uniform. A little later he success- to arfy civilized man. It is universally accepted t h a t a clean surface does not decay. All decay Is caused by germs, and the germs cannot multiply and work evil unless particles of food a r e left on, under or between the teeth. When these particles a r e so left they first become softened by the saliva, and then afford In response to the mother's plea, a lodgment for certain germs which exNew England magistrate agreed to discite an acid fermentation. The acid charge a youth accused of larceny and so formed attacks the enamel of the d r u n k e n n e s s if he would join the navy. teeth, and this is finally perforated. The Judge was evidently unaware of Now the door is opened for the the rules of the department, for when germs of decay to enter. In this minthe youth sought to enlist he was reute opening In the enamel they find a jected on the ground t h a t the Amerisheltered spot where they c a n j n c r e a s e , can navy is not a reformatory for the and by their action cause the destruccure of the vicious. Both the anmy tion of the vulnerable dentine. and the navy properly Insist that canThis whole process of the formation didates for enlistment shall be of good of the destructive acid may take place moral character. within a single day, if the toilet of the mouth is neglected. "Souvenir hunting," as It Is too Seeing how easy it is for this decharitably styled, has reached a point structive work to be started, one necessitating stern measures to wipe should make t r i p s to the dentist very It o u t Hotel proprietors, who are regularly, t h a t damage already done t h e greatest sufferers, a r e usually conmay be repaired, and t h a t the deposits SIZE OF H E R SHOES. tent with adding to the bill, when which settle on the teeth in the form they detect the thief, the value of of t a r t a r may be cleaned away. This T h e D e n i e r * U « e C i p h e r S y n i c m o f goods stolen. That is mistaken lent a r t a r does serious damage as long as N u u i b e m for Mnny llea»on». iency. In the Interest of public morit Is allowed to stay, and it cannot What number does she wear? asks ality such offenders should be handed be removed by any home treatment.— the Kansas City Star. It should be over to the police for prosecution. Youth's Companion. a surprise to a few men, at least, to With Judge and Jury doing their duty know that she no longer wears shoes souvenir h u n t i n g " would soon cease DatCle of Doaton T o w n . to be popular. of numbered sizes. The old 1, 2, 3. Constructively to right of them, way of nuaibering women's shoes has Allegorically to left of them. Children? There a r e millions of Metaphorically In front of them seen its day; now sizes are no longer t h e m ! Taxpayers are groaning everyThe imaginary Instruments of war designated by numbers, at least not in w he re because of the constantly Inconstructively thundered; the places where she buys shoes that creasing levy upon the resources to It waa theirs to cogitate upon the rea- cost as if they were made of gold and son why, build schoolhouses and support schools a precious stone or two. There are t h a t the swarming multitude may be So that they might differentiate be- m a r k s and numbers that tell the story tween those who should con- of length and breadth to the clerk, given the proper chsnce or s t a r t in structively die life, says the Portland Oregonlan. In but they mean nothing to the cusvain do school trustees exert them- And those who, constructively over- tomer. Who would guess that K17368** whelmed, should fly—_ •elves throughout vacation period of Otherwlso, some responsible head mellna 4 3-4 D? Only the shoe clerk, •ach year to provide room for the Inand he tells no one. might have blundered. creased number of children that each Therein Is the purpose of the ab•ucceedlng September sends trooping Into the supposed Jaws of death. sence of numbers on women's shoes. the for-the-sake-of-argumenta "I always wear a 3 B," she would to the schoolhouse doors demanding Into Jaws of perdition. admittance. Equally In vain do the say, and the clerk would see the num"good district f a t h e r s " In the rural Stormed at with theoretical i h o t and ber 4Vi D foot resting in the little shell. sections strive to keep ahead of t h e Rode the metaphyelcal six hundred: fitting stand. Without comment, he yearly Increasing outflow of Juvenile Bridges succumbed to metaphorical would bring shoes to fit snugly and life from the farmhouses of a popustress. not with too great discomfort. lous. prosperous land. As for vlllsges, The constructive heroes perished a p 'That's very pretty. I think I'll their streets are thronged and their parently at the moment of suc- take those," and he would begin to cess— homes and schools are crowded with hope a sale had been made. Now, If children. There Is no lack of child Fatally wounded in the subliminal he could only get them Into a box withconsciousness. life anywhere except In the fevered While, constructively, all the world out— Imagination of the alarmist and the 'I want to look at them again. J u s t wondered. homes of the relative few, to whom I a moment, please. Why, you said these nature, perhaps for good reasons of Honor, mathematically, the charge were 33 and they are 5s! Why, I her own, has declined to send children. they made, never In all my days wore anything Euclid's theorems for the part they bigger than 38! No, indeed! 1 shan't Government health officers are co-opPlayed. % be Imposed upon, I assure you. 1 • r a t l n g with the physicians of various While the differential calculus and care to see no other shoes. I shall go logarithms in mines constructStates In an effort to discover the somewhere where I can be given propively laid cause of the sproad of pellagra, a diser treatment." And a sale lost beDetonated and left the ranks conease of which no authentic case was cause the clerk could not hide the t r u e structlvely sundered— recorded in America till seven years Subtracted from the construcUve Jaws facts about the proper size of shoes ago. Pellagra Is distinguished by an of death. for her to wear. eruption of the skin resembling ec- Letting "x" equal the theoretical Jaws So a few years ago the manufacsema, but It is a much more serious of perdition. turers and the merchants resorted to ailment It frequently causes Insan- The problem Is to solve the equation cipher In designating shoes, and a trlgonometrlcally. ity, and Is fatal in more than 50 per And we shall have the remainder of "number" nowadays reads like a footcent of the cases. The physicians a t the six hundred, constructively. ball signal. Some women have even present think that It Is caused by eatpenetrated the cipher, and, consequent—Chicago Evening Post. ing food made from corn which has ly. some shops request that nothing be been spoiled by the appearance of How dull a "story" sounds ^fter said about numbers—the salesman will •om* fungus growth. It prevails In you have heard it! Your actions are measure the foot and bring a shoe to those parts of Europe where corn Is that tiresome to those who have correspond. That is he'll bring the commonly used as a food. There a r e known you a long time. first too large. In order to let the fair Out of the seething t u r m o 4 1 " * . connec1 _ Cfon' with the discovery o f ' t h e pole comes the London paper which explains to Its readers t h a t Lieutenant P e a r y did not literally nail the flag to a literal pole, aa there Is no pole there! 1 1 I fully defended himself against charges affecting his official conduct, but the cpirit of the Inquiry Instituted by Calhoun offended him. and he resigned, having served in the army five years. He determined to become a lawyer, a profession which in those days meant politics even more than now. After six m o n t h s of study in the law office of J a m e s Trimble at Nashville he was admitted to the Tennessee bar. and went to Lebanon to practice. Within a year he was appointed a d j u t a n t general of the State, with the r a n k of colonel, and was elected prosecuting attorney for the Davidson district, which necessitated his removal to Nashville. In 1823, when 30 years of age, he was elected representative to Congress from Tennessee, and served two terms, leaving the House to become Governor of Tennessee. Houston was elected flrst President of the Republic of Texas. The constitution of the new republic made him ineligible for re-election for two succeeding terms. At the end of the period he was re-elected and found the finances In bad shape. His first step was to Inaugurate an economical administration, which rescued the State from collapse. F r o m the flrst there had been a strong desire for annexation to the United States. When this was finally accomplished. Houston and Thomas J . Rusk were elected Senators. He served two terms In the Senate, but was defeated for re-election because of his attitude toward the various compromise measures. He returned to his honje In Texas, and In 1859 was nominated for Governor by acclamation at a public meeting. The campaign that followed demonstrated his ' , "Don the common people. He made a nrorotisu the State, arousing wild enthusiasm by his eloquent appeals for preservation of the Union. He was elected, and was Inaugurated as Governor Dec. 21, 1859. A special session of the Legislature met Jan. 21, 1860. to act on South Carolina's Invitation to Join the Confederacy. A general election had previously expressed secession sentiment. Houston opposed every step of the secessionists. but was defeated. When Texas seceded, Houston refused to take the oath of allegiance to the Confederacy and was deposed as Governor. Strong In personality, one of the great Individualists of American history. the name of Sam Houston Is as Indelibly Inscribed upon the scroll of the nation as that of the Lone Star State Itself. He was to Texas Its son and Its father, and no hero df the Southland Is stronger In the affections of Its people than the man of San Jacinto. buyer have the satisfaction of asking for something smaller. Meanwhile the men's shoes still have slies marked In plain numbers and in plain sight. Collection of Orr Kid*. M e m b e r s Now P r e l i m i n a r i l y E n g a g e d on a G r e a t W o r k . Washington correspondence: The new Tariff Board Is losing no time In getting down to business. Several meetings. In a sense preli-tnlnary in character, have already been held a t the office of the Secretary of the Treasury. Mr. MacVeagh. who was indirectly responsible for the creation of this Important new governmental body. A little later the members of the board will establish permanent headquarters, and will recruit the staff o t secretaries, tariff experts and other assistants who will be essential to the handling of the immense amount of technical detail t h a t will characterize the work of the commission. T hi s organization is to be per fected Just as rapidly as possible, in asmuch a s there is a tremendous amount of work Involved In the preparation of the report, which must be In the hands of President T a f t before March 31. 1910. The Tariff Board was created by the Payne tariff bill, and it will be remembered that authorization for this board, which was energetically demanded by the President, was granted by Congress only a f t e r a lively fight. Opponents of tariff revision downward, or r a t h e r Senators and Representatives who a r e strongly in favor of high tariff, became suspicious that t h e real purpose of the proposed board was to probe the whole tariff question and all .matters pertaining thereto, as. for instance, the comparative costs of production In various countries. The effect of such research would be to reopen the entire tariff question and to make it continuously a live Issue before the country. T hi s is contrary to t h e wishes of c e r t a i n interests, which contend t h a t t h e tariff question was settled, for t h e time being, by t h e Payne bill, and ought to be allowed to stay settled for several years. Therefore, the high protection advocates In Congress succeeded In having embodied In the tariff measure certain provisions limiting t h e activities of the tariff commissioners. President T a f t has. however, publicly announced his purpose to have his tariff inqulsl tors probe every phase of this huge subject. For the first six months of its existence. however, the general Tariff Board will be kept busy with what constitutes the primary purpose of its existence—a task that President Taft, revisionists and protectionists are all agreed must take precedence over all other phases of their Investigations. T hi s u n d e r t a k i n g Is nothing less than a world-wide Investigation to determine what countries do and what ones do not discriminate against the United States in their customs duties and other laws and regulations. The purpose of this is to enable the President to carry out t h e maximum and minim u m provisions of the new tariff law. AVrleltt'a lludnon Fllicht. After having waited over a week for favorable weather conditions for his est flight during the Hudsonon celebration ln~New Tork, Wilbur Wright "made good" by navigating his aeroplane from Governor's Island up the Hudson over the funnels of the warships with their up-rushing currents of a i r and past the air eddies from the big skyscrapers to a point opposite Grant's tomb and back, amid the cheers a t multitudes of people along the shores and the chorus of harbor craft whistles. He alighted without a Jar only a few feet from the starting point. This flight fulfilled the conditions of the celebration contract and made an interesting scientific demonstration to navy men of the capacity of the Wright machine to carry destructive bombs directly over the big warships. Later the same day, as the aviator was about to make a second flight to do bigger s t u n t s in the air about New York, the blowing out of a cylinder put his machine out of commission and narrowly missed Wright. This illustrated anew the variety of dangers under which the art of flying is as yet practiced. Mr. .Wright a n nounced that this would be his last flight for some time, and that neither he nor his brother. Orvllle, wished to be regarded as showmen. They would hereafter confine their flying to instruction of others under contract and to the scientific experimentation with new improvements. MICHIGAN MA TTERS INEWS O F T H E W E E K I: CONCISELY CONDENSED SHOT DOWN IN COLD BLOOD. Pool Flrea S b o t E u n nt A. J. S m i t h an L a t t e r I ' l e n d a w i t h l l l m N o t T o . S. O. Pool, a farmer, shot and seriously wounded A. J . Smith, a representative of the Owosso Sugar Company of Lansing, at the Pool farm, a mile west of Albion. Smith had gone to Pool's place with Champion Eslow of Albion, to whom he had let the jgb of harvesting the sugar beets on the Pool f a r m , which he claimed his campany's contract authorized him to d i In default of Pool's doing the work, t b e expense of the work to be ded acted from the proceeds of the crop ill making settlement with Pool. Eslow had gone out In the morning to do the work, but, according to his story. Pool ordered him off the f a r m a t the point of a gun. Eslow then came to town and took out Smith, who went Into the field and started the work for Eslow. As soon as Pool saw Smith he sent his son to the house for a gun. The lad returned with a shotgun and Mrs. Pool with' a rifle. Pool took the shotgun and shouted to Smith, jvlth an oath: "Now, you get out of here!"' Smith had only time to say, 'Please don't shooot. Mr. Pool." when the enraged man fired four shots from a distance of about four rods, the charge lodging in Smith's left arm and abdomen. Pool Immediately turned to let the other barrel go at Eslow. when Mrs. Pool shouted. "Don't shoot him; he isn't to blame." just In time to save a second victim. Eslow took the wounded man to the Albion hospital as quickly as possible, and although he Is In af serious condition from loss of blood. It is believed he will recover. DOCTOR AGAIN H E L D AS SLAYER. Police Uelleve the Mnyhelle Mlllmnn D e n t h M y a t c r y IJH C l e a r e d . With the r e a r r e s t the other night of Dr. George A. Frltch on a charge of causing the death of Miss Maybelle Millman of Ann Arbor, the Detroit police believe the mystery of Ecorse creek has been solved. The police found Joseph W. Leach, an automobile driver, who a f t e r a searching examination said he had taken the bags containing the dismembered body of Miss M i l ^ a n to the creek. Miss Millman told her mother on Aug. 14 t h a t she was going to Detroit to visit a former schoolmate. Miss Martha Henning. On Sept. 6 a weighted bag containing the torso of a young woman was found in Ecorse creek. The next day the head was found in another bag and Identified by Miss Henning as that of her chum. On Sept. 9. the day the corpse wao buried at Ann Arbor, ano-her bag containing the rest of the body was found. Miss Henning said she knew t h a t Miss Millman wished to undergo an operation and had mentioned the natne of Dr. Fritch. TOT PERISHES IN FIRE. F n t h e r Seen l l o u n e A h l u s e ; V a i n l y TrlcN to Kencue Child. WITHIN OUR BORDERS, Russell Hammond, 14 years old, fractured his left elbow in Marshall while playing football. Roy Estell, of Clarence Township, lost his left hand while operating a corn cutter. It being taken off a t the wrist Mrs. John F. Beyers, wife of the man a f t e r whom the small station of B e \ e r s was named. Is dead at the age of 70 years. The appeal case of Frank P. Glazier, former State Treasurer. Is scheduled for hearing In the Supreme Court November 11. The University of Michigan will give a four years' course in railroad administration for students wishing to qualify for railroad positions. Notice has been given by the faculty of the University of Michigan that hazing no longer will be tolerated. Violators of the rule will be expelled. Battery Mlsor fell under a Pere Marquette switch engine while on his way to work at the Grand Rapids Plaster Company's plant and his right foot was badly crushed. Investigation of a post office robbery at Whitmore Lake Is being m^de by the Chicago authorities. Postmaster J. G. Sprey reported that robbers smashed the safe and escaped with $304. John Povl, 12 years old, of Palnesvllle, while hunting and to s^iow a companion that the gun was not loaded, pulled the trigger and put a ball in his head 'from which he dlud. Desirous of obtaining a brief respite from -the monotonous whirl of the text book and the school room, the Holland school ma'ams have organized a social club for their own amusement. John Trieber. a farmer several miles south of Sebewalng. went to his barn and hanged himself during a fit of despondency on account of ill health. He leaves a large family and was quite wealthy. Coming home from school. Harold, the 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Flumadore, prominent young people of Deerfleld, found his mother dead on the bedroom floor. She had evidently died from heart disease some hours before, as the body was cold when discovered. Fire which originated from a defective electric light wire In the loft of Henry Otto's livery barn In Ithaca destroyed the barn with all Its contents and the Butler house adjoining, entailing a total loss estimated at $8.000. So rapidly did the flames spread that It was Impossible to rescue the horses and six were burned to death. Several vehicles were also consumed. Daniel Wells, son of J. W. Wells, wealthy lumberman of Menominee, returned recently from British Columbia, where he completed one of the largest purchases of timber made In the West this year. He closed a deal for the title of 700.000.000 feet of timber on the Island of Vancouver, Puget Sound. The timber consists principally of fir and cedar. The purchase was made for Investment purposes and It Is not likely any attempt will be made to manufacture It for some years. At the annual meeting of the Chicago & Kalamazoo Terminal Railway Company, A. B. Atwater, of D e t r o i t was re-elected President; F. T. Hodge, Kalamazoo, Vice President, and George W. Alexander. Detroit.^Secretary and Treasurer. The terminal property was some time ago sold to the Grand T r u n k and officials of this big corporation now head the terminal body. The survey, completed, a few days ago. between Battle Creek and Kalamazoo and extending to .Marcellus. was forwarded to Montreal and it Is expected that announcement will Boon be made public whether the main line of the Grand Trunk will be changed so as to reach Kalamazoo. While the mother was visiting with a near neighbor and the father was a t work on the railroad track only about t h i r t y rods away, the 3-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeFrain was burned to death when their house, just east of the D. & M. depot In Pinconning. burned to t h e ground at 2 o'clock the other afternoon. Mrs. DeF r a i n built a hot fire in the kitchen stove, and leaving the child alone in a f r o n t room, stepped over to a neighbor's house. The f a t h e r discovered smoke and flames pouring from his home and rushed to the house. Hearing the screams of his baby, he made f r a n t i c efforts to enter the blazing builrling, but was repeatedly driven back and nearly overcome by heat and smoke. Mrs. DeFrain Is prostrated and under the care of a physiConuueMt o f C a n c e r C o m l n K . Dr. John B. Murphy, the noted Chi- cian. T h e body of the boy, their only On trial but two days William Hoy cago surgeon, who has just returned child, was nearly consumed with the was not only convicted of attempted from Europe, brings the message t h a t house and Its contents. The loss Is murder In the Circuit Court, but was medical investigators are laying siege about $1,500, with no Insurance. Immediately sentenced by Judge North to the cancer enigma "as explorers to from five to ten years in Jackson have to the North Pole." He thought prison, with a recommendation of B A B E BOILS TO D E A T H . It probable t h a t more than one man seven. Hoy, who had come over from would arrive at the cause of cancer T h r e e - Y e a r - O l d C h i l d F a l l s i n t o T u b Ireland to work for Henry Norrls, of SealdliiK W a t e r . at the same time, and In his opinion husband of his cousin, became Infatthe victory would be achieved within As the result of falling into a tub uated with Mrs. Norrls. It Is claimed, five years. Dr. Murphy has Just been of hot water which had been left on but not finding his affection returned attending t h e International medical the floor. Antoinette Carlo. 3-year-old became ugly and was ordered to leave congress at Buda-Pesth and brought a daughter of John Carlo, is dead a t Jes- the Norrls farm. Without reply be new treatment for cancer. It Is to op- slevllle. The child was horribly scald- went into the house and returned with erate as soon as the disease manifests ed. A second fatal accident on the Go- a shotgun. Mrs. Norrls grabbed his itself Instead of waiting many months. gebic Iron range has caused the death shoulders, but too late to ward off the He found that America was well In the of Michael Grlbollch of Ironwood. The charge of shot that tore her breast lead In original medical research and man was crushed to death by a fall of and nearly caused- her death. Hoy that the serum or vaccination treat- ore a t the Newport mine. He was 40 then hit her on the head with the ment Is most popular In Infectious years old and leaves a wife and five butt of the gun and ran away, but diseases. was easily captured. children. One of the stories John Burroughs, the a^ed naturalist, loves to tell has to do with a friend of his named Orr. On one of his trips Mr. Burroughs happened to be in the town where Mr. Orr lives. Meeting him In the street Mr. Burroughs Insisted that his friend should accompany him to the hotel for luncheon. As they were eating Mr. Burroughs Inquired If his friend was not Interested In any specialty. "I think." said the naturalist, "every man ought to have a collection of some kind. It adds zest to life." "Oh, yes," said his friend. "I have quite a collection. I am Interested In flowers. Come home with me and I'll show them to you." As they approached the Orr home six fine, healthy children, playing on the lawn, ran to meet their father. FROM FAR AND NEAR. "These." said Mr. Orr. with a twinQUITS TAX COMMISSION. Three children were burned to death kle In his eye. "form my collection of orchids. Ain't they grand specimens?" in a fire which destroyed three resi- S r c r e t a r y W e l l a G . I l r o ^ v n l l e n l s r u a dences a t jdillvaje, a suburb of Pittato Accept P r i v a t e Clerkahip. —New York Press. burg, Pa. Wells G. Brown, who has been conA Lynohlnar Dee. All the buildings of St. Mary's Mis- nected with the State Tax Commission "No," drawled the mayor of a West- sion. a Roman Catholic school for In- as secretary and chief field man for dians at Ardmore, Okla., were destroyern town, "the boys had some money ed by fire. the past three years, has resigned his tied up In the bankrupt telephone composition and will become the confidenMary Keegan, who was a domestic pany, and they just didn't like the way for thirty years In the family of Thom- tial clerk of R. E. Olds, the automobile the receiver was handling the busi- as B. Kerr of New York, has been re- m a n u f a c t u r e r of Lansing. Mr. Brown ness." warded by a legacy of $10,000 In Mr. will sever his connection with the Tax " D i d n ' t eh?" commented the tourist. Kerr's will. Commission the first of the month. Contracts for furnishing big guns for "Well, what did they do about It?" Sues to lllaaolve I'nlon. "Oh. they Just hung up the receiv- the new "Dreadnoughts" will be a w a r d ed to the Mldvale and Bethlehem Steel The suit of Thomas J. Whalen for er."—Tlt-BIts. Companies. The cost of the guns will dissolution of the Railway Conduca p p r o x i m a t e $1,000,000. Fooled lllm. tors' Protective Association Is being Daniel F. Strobel. a New York State heard In D e t r o i t He asks for a di"He says he kissed you last night Republican Committeeman and postagainst your will." vision of the partnership profits on the master at Herkimer, was arrested a t "I suppose he believes it, too."— Little Falls, N. Y , charged with grand ground that the order baa not conductHouston P o s t larceny In connection with building a ed Its business legally. State road. Dropa Head un Street. If you give your own affairs the atIn a District Court decision a t NewAbraham Davenport, a well-known tention most people give to gossip, y o j klrk. Okla.. a rullnir was made that a will get rich. negro Interstate passenger ejected from resident of Hastings, fell dead on the Davenport was a train In Oklahoma fur refusing to street of apoplexy. To b« a successful explorer, don't comply with the Jim Crow law cannot born In Saline sixty-eight years ago let the other fellow beat you to I t recover dumaeeit. and came to Hastings after the war. Labor Commissioner Fletcher received a letter the other morning from Ernest C. Cullen. the deputy factory inspector arrested In Boyne City on a charge of s c l k l t l n g and accepting a bribe. In It Cullen admitted that he took $50 from Judge Harris of that city, president of the school board, under an agreement to allow the board to wait a year before complying with the law relative to Are escapes and certain safety appliances on schoolhouses. Thursday afternoon sneak thieves entered the Baptist parsonage in Milford. ransacked the house snd mads away with a purse cootslnlng $40 while the fsmlly was s b s e n t This Is the fourth robbery in this locality within ten days. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Rose and two children of Clifford Ford, aged < and 3 years, were burled from a carriage when a Cincinnati Northern passenger train struck the carriage at a crosslug. one mile north of Bollin. The children escaped Injury, bat Mr. and Mrs. Rose were severely h u r t better pick them up as fast aa possible. for the snow may fall at any moment. and then It would be quite useless to look for anything." "Don't let us lose a minute, then," replied Johnson. "Fire and wood— these are our chief wants." "Very well, you search one side and I'll take the other, and we'll take from the center to the circumference." This task occupied two hours, and J u l e s V e r n e ' s t h r i l l i n g and fasciall they discovered was a little salt n a t i n g romance, " F i n d i n g t h e N o r t h meat, about fifty pounds of pemmlcan. three sacks of biscuits, a small stock Pole," Is one of t h e g r e a t l i t e r a r y of chocolate, five or six pints of brandy, masterpieces, and should at t h i s and about two pounds of coffee, picked time be of p a r t i c u l a r i n t e r e s t in up bean by bean off the Ice. every home. V e r n e w r o t e it more Neither blankets, nor hammocks, nor clothing, were found—all had been cont h a n a g e n e r a t i o n ago, as a story, sumed In the devouring flame. a t h i n g of fiction. But it h a s come This slender store of provisions t r u e on him. J u s t as h i s " T w e n t y would hardly last three weeks, and T h o u s a n d L e a g u e s Under t h e S e a " hey had wood enough to supply the stove for al out the same time. came t r u e in t h e s u b m a r i n e , and Capt. Hatteras, with Bell and the __ h i s " B o u n d t h e W o r l d in 80 D a y s " loctor. had been away on an exploring has been shown easy of a c c o m p l i s h m e n t . But n o n e of t h i s f a m o u s expedition when the mutiny occurred. The morning after the little party had and gifted F r e n c h r o m a n c e r ' s c r e a t i o n s h a s been b o r n e out so f u l l y , built their snow house, he called Johnso much in detail, as h i s " F i n d i n g t h e N o r t h P o l e " 3 5 y e a r s a f t e r ion to him. he wrote It. As In the c o n t r o v e r s y b e t w e n C o m m a n d e r P e a r y and "Tell me all the particulars of the Dr. Cook, there Is a fight in mutiny on the brig,." he said. "Well," began the sailor, "almost ImVerne's s t o r y between two rival mediately a f t e r your departure Shanexplorers for the glory of finding Jon. supported by the others, took comthe pole. In the end, as In the mand of the ship. I couldn't resist present case—well you'd better him. Shandon made no attempt at discipline. He made them believe that read the story. ihelr privations and toils were at an The novel describes—vividly, end. Economy was entirely disregardas only J u l e s Verne can—the ed. "A blazing lire was kept up In the h a r d s h i p s and d a n g e r s of polar stove, and the men were allowed to eat exploration, and m a k e s clear to and drink all them wanted. Not only the readers w i t h w h a t b i t t e r n e s s was tea and coffee at their disposal, one explorer, who h a s overcome but all the liquor. On men who had been so long deprived of strong drink, all h a r d s h i p s of n a t u r e , will reyou may guess the r e s u l t They went g a r d a r i v a l explorer who t h r e a t on In this manner from the 7th to the ens to s n a t c h f r o m h i m t h e 15th of January." glory of r e a l i z i n g h i s life desire. "And this was Shandon's doing?" asked Hatteras. There Is a surgeon In t h i s story, "Yes, captain." the efficient aid to t h e chief of "It was about the 24th or 25th of the p a f t y , j u s t as Dr. Cook was January that they resolved to abanPeary's brave and efficient aid don the ship. Their plan was to reach J U L E S VEB.NE. the west coast of Bafllns bay, and from before their friendship was thence to embark In the boat and folbroken. low the track of the whalers, or to get In r a p i d i t y of action and t e n s e n e s s of i n t e r e s t , t h i s old s t o r y to some of the Greenland settlements on the eastern side. Provisions were of the g r e a t F r e n c h r o m a n c e r is not excelled by a n y t h i n g he abundant, and the sick men were so himself wrote, and by f e w stories of a d v e n t u r e w r i t t e n by excited by the hope of return that they others. were almost well. "They began their preparations for departure by making a sledge which CHAPTER L we shall find that is the best remedy they were to draw themselves, a s they had do dogs. This was not ready till It was a bold project of CapL H a t - for us." teras to try to push his way to the Bell tried to shake off his torpor and the 15th of February, and I was always north pole, and gain for England the help his comrade, while Dr. Clawbonny hoping for your arrival, though I half glory of Us discovery. But ho had undertook to go and fetch the sledge dreaded it, too, for you could have done nothing with the men, and they •trugglcd for nine months against cur- and the dogs. rents and tempests, shattering icebergs "Will you go with him, captain?" would have massacred you rather than remain on board. and breaking through almost insur- asked Johnson. "I tried my influence on each one "No. my friend," said Hatteras, In a mountable barriers. In an unprecedented winter ho had gentle tone, "if the doctor will kindly separately, remonstrating and reasonoutdistanced all his predecessors and undertake the task. Before the day ing with them, and pointing out the accomplished half his task, when he ends I must come to some resolution, dangers they would encounter, and also aaw all his hopes blasted. The mu- and I need to be alone to think. Go. the cowardice of leaving you, but it tiny of his wornout crew h a l left him Do meantime whatever you think best. was a mere waste of words. Not even the best among them would listen to and his little band of three men In a I will deal with the future." Johnson went back to the doctor and me. terrible situation—helpless In an icy (To be continued.) desert, 2.500 miles from their native said: "It's very strange, but the^captain land—their ship a wreck, blown up by A AVoman W h o Waa Sure. seems quite to have got over iflk anger. the mutineers. When the artist came upon the proHowever, the courage of Hatteras I never heard him speak so gently becession of snowy geese, waddling was still undaunted. The three men fore." which were left him were the best on "So much the better," said Clawbon- along In a green path of their own board his brig, and while they remain- ny. "Believe me, Johnson, that man selection and sputtering and hissing ed he might venture'to hope. can save us yet." like damp fireworks, she first admired, Of the Forward, the brig they had And drawing his hood as closely then followed them to their home with BO carefully built, not a vestige re- round his head as possible, the doctor mained. Shapeless blackened frag- seized his Iron-tipped staff, and set Mary, the best goosewotnan on Dartmoor, with a result which the author ments, twisted bars of Iron, cable ends out without further delay. •till smoldering, and here and there in Johnson and Bell commenced dlg- of "Furze the Cruel" relates, and UNCLE SAM W A R S ON T H E RAT. D JULES VERNE. % '.70$IW the distance spiral wreaths of smoke— that was all. Books, Instruments and precious collections were in ashes. Clawbonny, the surgeon, and Johnaon, the boatswain, surveyed the wreck. Bell, the carpenter, lay insensible on the Ice. Capt. Hatteras stood apart, arms folded, his faithful . dog beside him. "Poor old brig!" exclaimed the doctor. "I had grown attached to her. I loved her as one loves a house where he has spent a lifetime." "Ay! It's strange what a hold those planks and beams get on a fellow's heart." said Johnson. "And the long-boat—Is that burnt?" asked the doctor. "The mutineers carried it o f t " "And the pirogue?" "Shivered into a thousand pieces!" "Then we have nothing but the Halkett boat?" "Ves, we have that still, thanks to your Idea of taking it with you." "That isn't much." said the doctor. "And we have a dying one to look after." "A dying man?" "Yes. CapL Altamont. an American navigator, whose ship, the Porpoise, was stranded somewhere to the north. We found him, half starved and frozen on the Ice," said the doctor. Johnson muttered an exclamation of pity. But his mind went back at once to his own desperate situation. "Then wo have no fuel whatever?" ho said. "No." "And no provisions?" "No." "And no ship to make our way back to England?" It required courage to face these gloomy realities. After a moment's silence, Johnson said again; "Well, at any rate we know eractly how we stand. The first thing to be done now is to make a hut, for we can't stay long exposed to this temperature." "Yes. but we must first revive Bell," replied the doctor. "Then go and find the sledge, and get the American." Bell lay on the Ice almost Inanimate. Johnson had to take vigorous measures to rouse him, but at lasL by dint of shaking and rubbing him with snow, he succeeded. "Come, Bell," he cried, "don't give way like this. Exert yourself, my man; we must have a talk about our situation, and we need a place to put our heads In. Come and help me. Bell. You haven't forgotten how to take a •now huL have you? There is an Iceberg all ready to hand; we've only got to hollow It o u t Let's set to work; " T H E EXPLOSION OF T H E FOBWABD TOOK glng a hole In the heart of a great block of Ice. It was not easy work, owing to the extreme hardness of the material. However, this very hardness guaranteed the solidity of the dwelling, ar.u the further their labors advanced the more they became sheltered. Hatteras alternately paced up and down and stood motionless, evidently shrinking from any approach to the s^ene of the explosion. In about an hour the doctor returned. bringing with him Altamont, the American, on the sledge, wrapped up In Uic folds of the t e n t The dogs were so exhausted from starvation that they could scarcely draw it along, and they had begun to gnaw tholr harness. While the hut was being dug out the doctor went foraging about, and had the good fortune to find a little stove, almost undamaged by the explosion. Ho soon restored it to working trim, and, by the time the hut was completed, had filled it with wood and got It lighted. Before long it was roaring, and diffusing a genial warmth on all sides. The American was brought In and laid on blankets, and the four Englishmen seated themselves around the fire to enjoy their scanty meal of biscuit and hot tea. the last remains of the provisions on the sledge. Not a word was spoken by Hatteras, and the others respected his silence. When the meal was over, the doctor rose and went out. making a sign to Johnson to follow. "Come, Johnson," he said, "our goods ar scattered In all directions. We had . 0 ^ The World'* Timber. Prof. Somervllle's paper before the British Association on the timber supply shows that the world Is steadily approaching a timber famine. Already Britain pays each year 27,000,000 sterling for wood; Germany, with nearly twelve times the area of forest possessed by Britain, annually pays 12,000,000 sterling for Imported timber, and, although the United States of America exports wood and wood products to tho value of 20,000,000 pterllng per annum, she has to pay AS much for Imports. In Europe, Sweden and Russia are, of course, the chief timber exporting countries, but in both cases the vast inroads on supplies is seriously felt, and exports are being appreciably reduced. There are, of course, Canada and Siberia, but in Canada, at all events, wood is being used up at a rapid rate. Cleuulni; the Poultry IIon*e. Are you still a back number in allowing the poultry house to get filthy and dirty, foul-smelling nesting material, Infested with lice and mites? Or have you become progressive, and by actual trial have found out how well It pays to keep everything neat and clean and in a strictly sanitary condition? By this time you certainly have the farm work well in hand, and can spare a few hours' time for giving the poultry house and yard a thorough cleaning and overhauling. If the quarters are allowed to become filthy and Infested with vermin, as well as the fowls themselves, things will soon go to the bad, and the hens will take on that pale, languid appearance, which will surely terminate In disaster If neglected. Clean out not only all the droppings, but also all the old straw and litter In the house, cleaning out the nests, spraying them and the roosts with coal oil to kill mites. In fact, the entire aim should be to do everything in as thorough and painstaking manner as possible. Give the inside walls a good coat of whitewash, which both makes the house lighter and kills vermin. If the floor Is given a good coating of dry lime, It will serve to give the entire Interior a pleasant, healthy odor. This also has a beneficial effect In killing disease germs, and is especially valuable In case of disease, when It should be used around In the yards as well as In the house.— Agricultural Epltomlst. I m p o r t n u e e of Irrliration. Rivers are always i h f L j n r e a a oJLihe. and in this rer r W c h la b o o t - q o v t v x i — i n s t r a r y a Uvvii earueHT^ C l V l l izaflon. lza spect the Tigris and Euphrates are words to a neighbor. "There was a lady down along, a rivals of the Nile, for Babylonia, like The dafty lady what painted, and her come Egypt, was a river's "gift." Mesopotamlan Valley Is intersected, to Peter one day, and her says: gridiron fashion, by huge canals—not " 'I want they goosies to paint.' "Well, us wouldn't have It. Us dug out, but built upon the earth's thought her wanted to paint 'em, one surface, crossing the plain from river of 'em red. 'nother green, ' likely, to river and seeming to the traveler 'nother yellow, maybe, and It .might like ranges behind ranges of curiously regulated hills. From these, lesser canals branched In all directions and gave birth In turn to others still smaller, until at last the final threads carried the llfe-glvlng water to every grove and garden and Individual 1 palm. A system of Irrigation so mechanically perfect and on so vast a scale was never elsewhere seen. All the wealth and splendor and power of the ancient Babylonian and Assyrian empires were founded on this system. They Issued from and were dependent on It. The prosperity of the country hung on Its water supply as absolutely as the existence of a Saharan oasis hangs on Its well. A harm done to the Irrigation system was felt through all the civilization It nourished. It was so the Mesopotamlan civilization died. The complicated Irrigation works which watered the country required for their upkeep the superintending care of multitudes of trained laborers and expert engineers. Only knowledge and skill and large resources could deal with and maintain the Immense canals and sluices and dams and locks which distributed the river water over the land which composed a machinery as elaborate as a clock's, though of water works, not metal works. The hand of a steady and strong government was needed to wind that machinery up and keep It going, and there came a time when T l I E i n LAST MEANS OF SUBSISTENCE. that hand was withdrawn; —London be bad for their stomachs. But us Review. found her wanted to put "em on a I'lnntlnic T r e e * f o r Pontn. picture. Her had got a mazed notion The rapid denuding of our forests about the Rescurrection, wl' angels and the consequent scarcity of timber flapping over, and her wanted my for all purposes, especially the cheaper goosies for angels. kinds In the rough for farm require"Peter says he didn't know goosies ments, renders the planting of forest were like angels. Knows a lot, Peter trees of great Importance. There are do. Us couldn't make she out. Tho few farms, especially on prairies, that lady said 'twas Just the wings she have not several small pieces of land wanted. Her said angels ha' got t h a t are not easy of cultivation, which goosies' wings, and us cduldn't say 'em a little time and work will fit for the hasn't, 'cause us ain't seed any. Her planting of trees, which should be set knew all about it. In rows about four feet apart, and "Peter druve the goosies down," con- cultivated as corn. Seedling trees can cluded Mary, "and her painted 'em for be purchased from the larger nurseries angels sure nuff. Us never knew an- at from $3 to $5 per thousand, which gels has goosies' wings, but the lady Is cheaper than the labor required to knew. Her was sure on't." dig them In the timber lands If they could be gotten for nothing. I t Is a Spoke from Experlenee. good plan to cflt off the entire top of A young man was very fond of the young tree when setting out. This boasting about his father's paintings. will give a good, strong, straight "With one stroke," he said, "he growth for the trunk of the f u t u r e could turn a smiling face into a sor- tree. A little pruning during the first rowful one." and second summers will start the "That's nothing." said little Tommy; trees with good, clean trunks, and "so can our our teacher." after this but little care will be needed. A small plat of land. If properly T h e K i l t y I t e a e n l e d It. Edwin, aged 3, who unwisely fon- handled, will in a few years furnish dled his small cat overmuch ap- an abundance of firewood and posts peared before his mother one day, his and poles that are necessary for face guiltily pained and a scratch fences. The value of a constant supupon his hand. "What happened?" ply of timber on the farm can hardly she asked "I bent the kitty a little," be overestimated. Posts can be grown in groves much he said briefly.—The Delineator. cheaper than in line hedges. Hedge fences are not to be recommended, except In special cases, for the reason that the labor required to keep a hedge fence In good shape would care for a large grove. A tall hedge may sometimes be of great value for a windbreak, and for such purposes their use should not be discouraged, though a grove will usually furnish better protection to cultivated fields and farm buildings. The varieties best adapted to western prairie countries are black locust, catalpa and cottonwood, succeeded by soft maple, mulberry and white ash, the last named being of somewhat slower growth than the others, but more valuable for many purposes. Orltcln o f Doer N a m e * . Spaniels were so called because the original breed of this type came from Spain. The Blenheim spaniel got his name from Blenheim Palace, where this dog first gained popularity In the time of the great Duke of Marlborough. In the same way the King Charles spaniel owes Its name to the merry monarch. Fox terriers did not gain their name from a likeness to the fox. but from the fact that formerly they were used In hunting foxes. Many years ago they were sent by their masters down the fox's burrow to draw and kill their quarry. It was In those days a saying that a good fox terrier never came out of a burrow without the fox. He either brought out his prey dead or never came out alive himself. The bulldog used to drive cattle and was trained to meet the rushes of his enormous charges by gripping them In their tenderest spot—the nose. T h u s In time he became known as the bulldog. The dachshund is a German dog. and, as his name indicates when translated, was used for hunting badgers. Hence his name—badger dog. Among hunters In the fatherland this breed Is still popular, although as a rule they are now too delicate to face such a ferocious fighter as the badger. Spitz dogs are so named owing to their sharp nose. This Is also a German name, spitz meaning sharp pointed. Another name for this breed Is Dalmatian dog. because his native home was In Dalmatla.—Chicago News. " W o r s t M a m m a l P e s t " Blamed f o r t h e Loss of Millions. Rat clubs and other societies for systematic warfare on destructive rodents may leap into popular favor among housekeepers, now that the government has officially sanctioned this method of extermination of the worst mammal pest in the United States. The rat has been recognized by the government as a problem. Its activity In disseminating infectious diseases has long loomed up as a danger signal to the health authorities, and losses from its depredations run Into many million dollars a year, according to an official statement Just Issued by the Department of Agrlcul'ture. Dr. David E. Lantz of the bureau of biological survey has taken vigorous hold of the question, and thus he proceeds to throw a bomb into the camp of believers in the cat as a rat destroyer. "However valuable cats may be as mousers, few of them learn to catch rats. The ordinary house cat Is too well fed and consequently too lazy to undertake the capture of an animal as formidable as the brown rat." The department In a bulletin emphasizes the importance of rat clubs and suggests that interest in organized rat hunts may be stimulated by offering prizes or rewards in various communities to the individual hauling forth the greatest number of dead rats a f t e r one of the crusades. Pamphlets dealing with the rodent problem and suggestive of ways in which the rat may be eventually routed from Its haunts have been scattered broadcast among the farms and villages all over the United States, and the department expects to make Its campaign In this direction one of thoroughness. Call to P e a r y a n d Cook. Upon the suggestion of President Osborn of the American Museum of Natural History and President Huntington of the American Geographical Society, President Remsen of Johns Hopkins, who Is also head of the National Academy of Sciences,wrote both Commander Peary and Dr. Cook that the academy would be pleased to Judge of any data concerning their polar explorations that they desired to submit. This invitation was at once accepted by Peary, but was declined by Cook on the ground that he had promised to submit his data first to the University of Copenhagen, a f t e r which they would be open to all the scientific societies of the world. About the same time tho National Geographic Society of Washington invited both Peary and Cook to submit their data to a scientific commission. It decided to print the records of both explorers. While In WashW h y l i n y l a G r a d e d I-orr. ington last Sunday Dr. Cook announcThe rules of the National Hay Asso- ed that he was willing to submit his ciation recognizes twenty-three grades data to the American scientific men of hay, which seem to fall Into five simultaneously with that of the Danclasses: Timothy, clover, mixed tim- ish University, provided that the findothy and clover, wild grasses and al- ings should be made public at the falfa. Choice timothy hay must be same time. Dr. Cook was accorded a sound, properly curgd, of bright nat- most enthusiastic and official recepural color, not mixed with more than tion in Washington, where he delivered a lecture, the district commissioners one-twentieth of other grasses, and taking part In the welcome extended. well baled. Lower grades of timothy . . • - — • if. uuq xnr- ijrmnr. Clover hay has two grades. No. 1 and more."^'The Peary Arctic Club read Xo. 2. No. 1 clover must be medium Peary's official statement and voted its clover, sound, properly cured, not confidence in his report of the discovmixed with more than one-twentieth ery of the North Pole. of other grasses and well baled. Choice alfalfa hay must be reasonably fine leafy alfalfa of bright green color, baled. Other grades of alfalfa are Nos. 1, 2 and 3, and "no grade." These rules are used by most cities t h a t have official Inspection. A large percentage of the timothy Kansas City, Mo., is Just completing on the market Is graded below No. 1. a labor temple. The reasons are that many meadows New Jersey State convention Printare cut for years, until they become ers' League meets at Orange this weedy and mixed with other grasses, month. and that the hay Is often cut too late, Industrial disputes In Canada durso that It loses the bright natural ing August meant the loss of 108,000 color and palatablllty. If the farmer working days. would send to market nothing but The official Journal of the Internawhat the feeder considers good he tional Association of Steam Engineers would get a higher price. It might will hereafter be printed In Brooklyn, be necessary In some cases to educate N. Y. In England the trade unionists are the country buyer also. Timothy has the lead, especially interested in the establishment of a central labor college, which they will among city feeders, because It is not finance. only nutritious but palatable and nonThrough the initiative of Boston laxative, and the horse Is not likely (Mass.) Typographical Union, a call to overload. Nevertheless, other kinds has been Issued for the formation of of hay would often prove better for a New England Typographical Union. the feeder. Alfalfa, for Instance, has The formation of a council to be high muscle-building qualities and Is composed of wood carvers, upholsterespecially valuable for draft horses. ers, cabinet makers and finishers is It is highly relished, however, add being discussed in Boston^ Mass. the horse may overload. Delegates from eight building trades Meantime the farmer Is obliged to councils in Massachusetts met recentInclude clover and other legumes to ly to discuss the advisability of formhis rotation In order to maintain the ing a State branch of building trades fertility of his land. In regard to good councils. The first Armenian mass meeting rotations the United States Department of Agriculture Is glad to give held in Boston for the purpose of arousing Interest among Armenian advice. workers in the trade union movement In any case, the farmer who sells took place recently. hay should seek to produce the highThe California section, woman's deest grade by keeping his meadows partment of the national civic federapure and by proper methods Of cut- tion, proposes organizing a number of ting, curing and stacking. F u r t h e r co-operative homes for girls employed points may be found In Farmers' Bul- in offices and shops. letin 362, "Conditions Affecting the The Wisconsin Legislature during Value of Market Hay," which may be the session ending June 18, 1909, passobtained free from the United States ed eighteen of the seventy-four labor bills Introduced, and five of the fourDepartment of Agriculture. teen Joint resolutions relating to laEuropeans have discovered that bor. At a meeting of the Victorian (AusAmerican syrup barrels, once used, are better than new ones. They are used tralia) Dockyard and Ship Laborers' especially for the pickling of meat, Union it was decided to take Into consideration the advisability of Joining and If of hard wood, even In the in a federation all dock laborers in United States, bring bettef prices than the commonwealth. new ones. The labor stuatlon in Switzerland Highly successful Is said to be a has peculiar features. A considerable new steamship propeller. Invented by part of the country's Industrial operathe Grand Duke of Oldenburg, In tions are carried on in the rural diswhich the blades are placed on an tricts. the employes working In their own little strips of land during the advancing screw line. Instead of lying short farmipg season of the summer, in a plane at right angles to the shaft, and In the factories or other industrial as usual. establishments the rest of the year. Trade unionists in Sweden have a Four hundred leading German sugar novel way in staving oft defeat and refiners and beet growers have formed starvation. In nearly all of the cities an association to Increase the con- where the organized men are stroni sumption of sugar in that country, numerically, parks are owned by them which uses less per capita than most Here the men congregate every day. and their share of the rations, which other civilized nations. the union purchases, is given them. The total area of Africa Is esti- U is said that the strikers have the mated at about 11,500.000 square miles, sympathy of the farmers, and that of which Great Britain owns 2,713,910 the farm products are being sold to the men at a nominal figure. square miles. State Printer Shannon reports that Coffee was first produced in Arabia the use of linotype machines in the early In the fifteenth century. It waa State printing office during the last first Imported Into England about session of the California Legislature saved the State |146 k day. 1650. 'HE WEEKLY "ORIAN 1492—Columbus discovering America. 1642—First commencement held at Harvard College. 1683—The first German immigrants arrived at Philadelphia. 1758—First legislative assembly ever held in Canada met at Halifax. 1765—Anti-Stamp Act Congress met In New York City. 1784—First Protestant Episcopal convention met in New York City. 1805—Lewis and Clarke entered Oregon territory at Lewlston. 1818—A constitution for Connecticut was ratified by the people First General Assembly of IllinolB met at Kaskaskla. 1829—The ports of the United States reopened to British commerce. 1830—Independence of Belgium proclaimed a t Brussels. 1831—Free trade convention met In Philadelphia. 1846—First constitutional convention in Wisconsin m e t 1853—The province of Buenos Ayres seceded from the Argentine confederation. 1854—First zinc works in Bethlehem, > Pa., began operations Abraham • Lincoln challenged Stephen A. Douglas to a Joint debate in the campaign for the Senate Burning of the steamboat E. K. Collins on Lake Erie resulted in the losa of twenty-three lives. 1£58—First overland mall arrived In St. Louis from San Francisco. 1862—Battle of Corinth ended In a victory for the Federals. 1864—Confederate steamer Florida captured a t Bahia, Brazil. 1865—Alexander H. Stephens released on parole from Fort Warren, In Boston harbor. 1867—Russia transferred Alaska to the United States States. 1871—Unlversilty of Alab<iina reorganized ar^y^pened. 1873—Ex-Senator Pomeroy shot by exCongressman Conway in Washington. 1878—Marquis of Lorne appointed governor-general of Canada. 1886—Gales and floods in Texas and Louisiana destroyed 247 lives and much property. 1890—Chief of Police Hennessey of New Orleans murdered by members of the ItalSar Mafia. 1891—The Chilian steamer "Itata" released on bonds and left San Diego for Valparaiso... .Equestrian s t a t ue of Gen. Grant in Lincoln Park. 1 898^iaISe'slilp % ^Vl'rfJbrirNewport News. 1899—The President laid the cornerstone of the new Federal building In Chicago. L901—Charles Kendall Adams resigned the presidency of the University of Wisconsin. 1904—United States battleship Georgia launched a t Bath, Maine. 1908—The Servian Assembly voted to support the government against Austrian aggression Harry AGarfield Inaugurated president of Williams College Gen. Eppa Hunton, a noted officer in the Confederate army and a former United States Senator, died in Richmond, Va Austria-Hungary notified the powers of the virtual a n nexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina Great historical pageant in Philadelphia In celebration of tho city's 225th a n n i v e r s a r y . . . .Independence of Bulgaria declared by Prince F e r d i n a n d . . . .United Statea and China concluded a treaty of arbitration. Asraln Declared n Leper. Prominence has been given again to the case of John Early, the suspected leper who was detained as such by the Washington authorities and later delivered to New York, where he was released from the hospital on the word of Dr. Bulkley that he was not suffering from leprosy, by a report to the Treasury Department from Consul Johnson a t Bergen, Norway. This la to the effect that at the recent International leprosy convention there Dr. Hanson, the discoverer of the leprosy bacillus, asserted t h a t he had found the bacillus of leprosy In a piece of skin taken from the American soldier, John Early, and which was sent to him by Early's wife. This decision from a man regarded aa the foremost authority tends to confirm the position taken by the Washington health authorities. After his dismissal from the New York hospital Early was deprived of the pension for total disability which had been granted when he became known as a leper. T h e S t . L o u l a D a l l o o n Ila« e . The balloon St. Louis No. III., with S. Louis von Phul as pilot, and J. N. O'Reilly as aid. won the balloon race for distance, which was started from St. Louis, and also the Lnhm cup, having traveled 540 miles before landing at Mills Lac, Minn. The Indiana finished second by landing at Albany, Minn., a distance of 525 miles. The Centennial, with Honeywell and Tolland aboard, landed at Silas, La., a distance of 495 miles. They were longest in the air, namely, forty-seven hours, twenty-one minutes. N e w HlKh-Flylnic lleeord. At Potsdam, Germany, Orvllle Wright had driven his biplane far above the highest point yet attained by aeroplanes, namely, to the altitude of 1,600 feet, in the presence of a multitude of people, among whom was the German crown prince. Such was the confidence felt after that demonstration that the emperor permitted tho crown prince to go with Wright as a passenger for a ten-mlnuto flight at an altitude of sixty f e e t It took the machine fifteen minutes to climb to tho maximum height, but the descent was made at terrific speed In five minutes. CTJSE3D ITCHl.iQ HU*uOH. AFTER "Little black swellings were scattered orer ray face and neck and they would leave little black scars that would Itch so I couldn't keep from •cratcblug them. Larger swellings would appear and my clothes would stick to the sores. 1 went to a doctor, but the trouble only got worse. Cy this time It was all over my arms and the upper part of my body In swellings a i large as a dollar. It was so painful that I could not bear to lie on ray back. Tha second doctor stopped tha Milwaukee, Wis. — " L y d i a E . Pink- swellings, but when they broke tba h a m ' s Vegetable Compound has made places would not heal. I bought a set me a well woman, of the Cutlcura Remedies and In lesa and I would like to thnn a week some of the places wera tell the whole world nearly well. I continued until I had of it. I suffered f r o m f e m a l e t r o u b l e used three sets, and now I am sound and f e a r f u l r a i n s in and well. The disease lasted threa ray back. I h a d t h e years. O. L. Wilson, Puryear. Tenn., best d o c t o r s and Feb. 8, 1908." they all d e c i d e d Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sola t h a t I had a tumor in addition t o mv Props, of Cutlcura Remedies, Boston. female trouble, and Soantled I,Ike a n E c h o . advised a n opera"Some day," shrieked the militant . t i o n . L y d i a E. J i n k h a m ' s Vegetable Compound made suffragette, "the women of this counm e a well woman and I have no more try will rise In a body and seize the backache. I hope I can help others by reins of power! Keep your eyes and telling them what Lydia E . r i n k h a m ' s ears open!" "'Ere's 'opln'!" heartily exclaimed a Vegetable Compound h a s done f o r m e . " — M r s . E m m a I m s e , 8 3 8 F i r s t S t , slightly inebriated man In the audiMilwaukee, Wis. ence. The above is only one of the thouDlalemper sands of g r a t e f u l letters which are constantly being received by t h e In all its forms, among all ages of P i n k h a m Medicine Company of Lynn- h o n e s and dogs, cured and others in Mass., which prove beyond a doubt t h a t the same stable prevented from having Lydia E . P i n k h a m ' s Vegetable Com- the disease with Spohn's Distemper pound, m a d e f r o m roots and herbs, Cure. Every bottle guaranteed. Over actually does cure these obstinate dis- 500.000 bottles sold last year. $.50 and eases of women a f t e r all o t h e r m e a n s 11.00. Good druggists, or send to manhave failed, a n d t h a t every such suf- ufacturers. Agents wanted. Write for ering woman owes i t t o herself t o a t free book. Spohn Med. Co., Spec. Conleast give Lydia E. P i n k h a m ' s Vegeta- tagious Dlscases^Goshen, Ind. ble Compound a trial before submitTreaeon. t i n g t o a n operation, or giving u p hope of recovery. Then Bwana Tumbo scratched his Mrs. Pinkham, of liynn, Mass., head. invites all sick w o m e n to write "This thing Is getting dull," he said. her for advice. She has gruided. "It's 'Peary and Cook! They've found thousands t o hcaltli a n d her the pole!' advice is free* I'm out of sight—like a blooming mole!" SlIFFERINfl ONEJEAR Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound —D. The R & y b LAM? If you are in doubt as to the cause of your disease, mall us a postal requesting a medical examination blank. Our doctors will carefully diagnose your case, and if you can be cured you will be told so; If you annot Le cured you will be told so. You are not obligated to us in any way, for • " Vnn are • fl t3. to the nearest agency of the D o n ' t give babies physic. W h e n baby needs a laxative, let Nan—Bessie Is going to marij- a professor. Is she? Professor of what? Fan—Palmistry. I think. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to Utke as candy. Our Idea of a wise man Is one who doesn't dispense free advice. aPltAI.NB AMD n n r i S E H dlaappear like m a t I c under the b r a l l n t touch of r e r r r Davli' Painkiller. Durlut t b l i Icy wratbar DO bouaabold should ba without It. In tic. Mc, 40c alxoa. mother take acandy Cascaref. C o n n t r u e t l o II o f I.n n >ciin(re. An absurdly worded statement of a T h e s e i n n o c e n t , vegetable tablets fact which was not in itself remarkact t h r o u g h t h e m o t h e r ' s milk. A able recently tried the gravity of the million m o t h e r s n o w k n o w t h a t listeners. It was on the occasion of n o t h i n g can take their place. 8S9 the funeral of an elderly woman In a New England town. She had left an Veit-pocket box. 10 cents—at dnif-ttorei. old mother, nearly '90 years of age, and People now use a million boxes monthly. an only son who was well on toward 50. The services were conducted by a timid young clergyman, recently settled over the parish. After praying for many and various things, he said: "And two, we especially pray that the Lord will comfort and sustain in N O T H I N G L I K E IT F O R their loss and sorrow. One Is the orphan, who, although no longer young. TUP TrrTU cxceU any dentifrice ' • • K i I k b I n i a clearuing. whitening and Is an orphan still, and must so conr e m o v i n g tartar f r o m ihe teeth, b e i i d e t dectioying tinue; the other Is the mother, far adall g e r m i of d e c a y and d i i e u e w h i c h o r d i n a r y vanced In years, who has survived her t o o t h preparatioo* cannot d o . daughter, although considerably her T U P M m I T U P"*tine med ai a raouthsenior." ' n t I w I U U I f l w a s h diiinfecU the mouth TOILET ANTISEPTIC and throat, purifies the breath, and kill* the germi w h i c h collect in the mouth, causing tore throat, bad teeth, bad bieath, grippe, and much l i c k n e u . VV >cn T U F F Y F ^ ' ' r i ' ' a , n c ^ ' tifedt a c h e I n t t I k w and bum. may be instantly relieved and strengthened by P o x tine. ' 3 a x t ' n e v v ^ ' destroy the germs that cause catanh, ncal the inlamination and slop the discharge. It it a sine t c m e d y for u t e r i n e c a t a r r h . ^ A T A B S U I «nnn P a x t i n e is a harmless yet p o w e r f u l •ermicide.disinfelUnt a n d deodorizer. U s e d in bathing it destroys odors a n d leave* t h e b o d y antireptically c l e a n . LARGE SAMPLE FREE! Dr. MclNTOSH c e l e b r a t e d Natural Ulerlne Supporter |lTr« linniMI»lo r«ll«f. Sold by all snr> Save the B a b y — U s e THE HASTINGS A MclNTOSH TDUSS CO. t i l Wa'aal St., fHlMDELfHIA. 1*4., n a i i u f a r t u r a n of (niaMa and aola makara of tba Oannlna •tanip*! "MclDtoah" Supporter. H O M f - C rvcant axtanaloo of tha K. C. O, I I " I " ! R-IL b r l D i a t b o u i a s d s o f a o r a a o f Una ^ . • o v a r s m t n t land a l o o i thta Una on J** aoll. cllinata. watar. timber and r a o i a ; alfa'fa. labtiat.atock,fruit, t r a i n and r t f alabla*. CURE out I n i f atton. OOUK NOW and t a t a boma f o r n u t h l a t , InXaad of pajrlnt h l t b prleaa alaawhara. If you h a r a I jrour bomaataa Too oan taka tba lV«.rt Laad Act. a Boma atock ranobaaand daadad landl f o r aala by ownwik n l o t f o r 11 »a land man. Addraaa II. O. D o u l t TUASD COM.. VataJa, CkUCumla, Oraton K j . . K K N cO. N E V A D A Should bo l i v e n at once w h e n the Utile o n e cougha. It h e a i t the delicate t h r o a t and p r o t e c t ! the l u n | a f r o m infection—guaranteed aafe and very p a l a t a b l e . Cropaaura wltb. PILES PAY as4 REA CO., DEPT. BS, MINNEAPOLIS, Mill. TFN" U a a a t i n a l XOTCa, Oanuloa ConO v V f (adarata Moua;. • I.OO. | U r a colaa and ,par monay. Prlcalist aant apon racalpt of >o puataca. I v v a r X t a a p a a y . ia<t »- U a d a a A t a . , A t l a B i a . C a Heading an army of at least 20,000 enthusiastic and excited men and women, Gypsy Smith, evangelist, Monday evening led the most dramatic religious demonstration against the South Side levee In Chicago that that city— or any other, for that matter—ever has seen. The parade In the streets followed a meeting In the Seventh Regiment Armory, In which at least 10,000 people look part, and was followed by two other big meetings, and several overflow meetings, in which the attendance more than doubled this early gathering. Beginning In tense excitement, caused by the opposition to the A l l DruatUta. 2 5 eaata. Wanted * 0 work r a q u l n d . tn «>-0P*wte and sattlaIn Ckll lUautlful Homa and abaolutaly DO A. kybrck, llrlatat. U. I. Add S#n«l Ifto for t>em\ proposition 7#C e torj. II allllrleJ with Sore t j e s , bm I n i e n t o r ' s I n s l n i c t i o n Book oaah tor Idea*. U a U t . X.U, falaat Attaeaey, U.a.tr, Caia SCENTS A I D A L L CO National Legislator Dies of B r l g h t ' s Disease at Hotel In Fargo. United States Senator Martin N. Johnson of North Dakota died from an attack of acute Brlght's disease at his hotel in Fargo. Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock. His death leaves a vacancy to be filled by an appointment by Governor Burke, a Decnocrat. Johnson's death leaves the political situation In North Dakota in an extremely chaotic condition. As McCumber comes up for re-election before the next primaries this will necessitate the election of two Senators. A week ago Senator Johnson submitted to a second operation for a nasal trouble and was thought to be doing well. He had been a sufferer from the fatal disease for years and had complained for two days, but reports Thursday were reassuring. He became suddenly worse late In the afternoon and death followed quickly. His wife and brother were present when he died. The body will be taken to Pettersburg, Nelson County, for Interment. Senator Johnson was 59 years old. He was born on a farm in Racine County, Wisconsin, and was a son of Rev. Nelson Johnson, a native of Norway. Senator Johnson was a graduate of Wisconsin University and went to North Dakota in 1882, devoting his attention to farming. He was a member of the constitutional convention. In 1889 he was a candidate for United States Senator and tied the party vote in caucus, but was defeated in the Joint session. In 1890 he was sent to Congress and was three times nominated by acclamation. He was eight years In the lower house. He was a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church and had been a member of the general conference of that body. MAJOR GENERAL OTIS IS DEAD. R e t i r e d A r m y Officer Passes A w a y a t Home in Rochester, N. Y. Major General Elwell Stephen Otis, U. S. A., retired, died at his home in Rochester, N. Y., at 1:20 Thursday morning. His ailment was diagnosed as senile debility combined with a severe cold. General Otis was born in parade, and increased by the religious fervor under which the worshipers worked, the gypsy evangelist held the great mass of people In check, and finally, in the Alhambra Theater meeting, showed his perfect control over an audience collected, as was this one. from the most notorious dives In the levee district. The red light district did not take the invasion seriously. Never before, perhaps, in the annals of the district were so many persons grouped In the houses at one time. But the men and women who marched and sang through the ill-paved streets did not know that, and their voices rose in a fervor of roiigious enthusiasm, as t h o u g h they would convert the whole district by the earnestness of their singing. And behind the drawn blinds, up at which th'-J marchers gazed with wonder and sorrow and a certain curiosity, the followers of the life of joy laughed and smoked and drank and scoffed. TYPHOON S W E E P S ACROSS LUZON H e a v y Lnn* of L i f e f i n d G r c n t D n n s nsre t o P r o p e r l y H e p o r t e d . A typhoon of unusual severity swept across northern and central Luzon on Sunday night. Wire communication with all points beyond Dagupan and Luzon was cut off and details are lacking. One message brought to Dagupan from San Fabian says that the loss of life was considerable and the damage to property heavy. Torrential rains accompanied the storm and an extensive area was flooded. The railroad bed was washed out at several points and one railway station was swept away. Many casualties attended a typhoon that played havoc with the native shipping and damaged other vessels at various points on the Chinese coast. QUEBEC F I R E COSTS $650,000. Flumes Sweep Mnn River LoNen Front Life. and One Fire that destroyed over $650,000 worth of property and cost the life of one fireman swept the river front at Quebec. The blaze started in the Canadian Northern Railway Company's elevator about 9 o'clock Saturday evening. Fanned by a strong wind, the flames swept to the warehouses and customs buildings along the river. The Canadian Pacific liner Empress of Ireland, crippled by colliding with a submerged wreck, was towed to safety with difficulty. At midnight the firemen had the situation in hand. The Canadian Northern elevator was rained at $300,000 and contained 135,000 bushels of grain. Wife and Her Slater Shot to Ueuth. on Shaft, Chemlnt Dlow Drraka .VccU; 1838 at Frederick, Md. He served In the Civil war and the Spanish-American war, and commanded the Philippine forces from August, 1898, to May, 1900. He was retired in 1902. SPANISH CABINET RESIGNS. Moret Said to H a v e Accepted Prem i e r s h i p at K i n g ' s Behest. Premier Antonio Maura and every member of his Conservative Cabinet resigned In Madrid Thursday. King Alfonso accepted their resignations. After a long consultation with the King, Signor Moret, the Liberal leader, formed a Cabinet In which he Is at once Premier and Interior Minister. The new Ministers, who took the oath of office at once, a r e : Premier and Interior Minister—Moret y Prendergast . Foreign Affairs—Perez Caballero. Finance—Senor Alvaradao. War—Lieutenant General de Luque. Marine—Rear Admiral Concas. Public Works—Senor Gasset. Public Instruction—Senor Barroso. Justice—Martinez del Campo. When the president of the House of Representatives announced that the Maura Cabinet had resigned, there was such an uproar he had to adjourn the session. Wealthy Woman Killed In Anto. Mrs. Gardiner Green Hubbard, widow of the first president of the American Bell Telephone Company, and mother of the wife oT Prof. Alexander Graham Bell, was thrown from her automobile as the result of a collision with a trolley car in Washington, D. C., and died in the Garfield Hospital. Her skull was fractured. Fire In Pennaylvnnla Town. Nearly a dozen buildings, valued at 5200,000, were burned in Mapleton, Pa. Among the places destroyed were the Clarendon Hotel, the general store of L. W. Bell and the Mapleton Item office. Dam Die*. Whirling on a shaft at the rate of 180 revolutions a minute. John Crabell, a chemist, was hurled to the floor of the Utah copper mill in Bingham. Utah, lifeless. His clothing had caught on a set screw which wrapped his clothing around the shaft. Flrat M A J O R Gt.NLHAL E. S. OTIS, Found Three people were murdered by an unldentifled man near Kansas City, Kan., Wednesday. Alonzo Van Royer, his wife and a sister-in-law. Miss Rosa McMahon were the victims. The women were found dead In the kitchen of their home. Police suspected the husband and began to search for him. Late at night his body was found 300 yards from the house, covered with leaves. Mrs. Van Royer was shot three times and her sister six times. Cancht IF C U R E D Ci^aSU ^ riilala (ar*. BETHESDA" Denizens of the Levee District W a t c h the D e m o n s t r a t i o n f r o m D a r k e n e d Windows. Stan, THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. B O S T O N . MASS. on apptlcallun. "MODERN T H R E E MYSTERIOUSLY SLAIN. f O R SALE AT DRUCt S T O R E S . B O c . OR POSTPAID BY MAIL- leal iDstruuiaot dMlvre and laadlna r u t f l ' t a In I'nltrd MalM aud Canada. ICatnl ' f . price list and particular! mall*d INVADE "TIs not so bad as that, my friend. This polar fuss will have an end. They'll never make T. R. a hermit— Just wait till he comes home with Kermlt! —Chicago Tribune. Not a P e n n y to P a y f o r the Fullest Medical E x a m i n a t i o n . S T A N D A R D OIL C O M P A N Y Twelve T h o u s a n d C h r i s t i a n s , Singing, March B e f o r e Darkened Houses and Big Crowd. O. N u t t MUNYON'S Eminent Doctors at Your Service Free Is a low priced lamp. There are lamps that cost more b u t t h e r e is no better lamp m a d e at any price. It is m a d e upon scientific principles. Th»»r« in nothina in lamo making Gypsy SMN I STORMS Fl IT. S. SENATCE JOHNSON DIES. D! 3 , Palnfal SvrelllnK' Broke and Did Xot Ileal—SofTered Three Y e a r a — T o r i area VlelU to C o l l c a r n . Dlca. With a flst blow, Edgar Goodwin killed Eugene Williams instantly in Nashville, breaking his neck. The men quarreled, it is said, over a dollar. Goodwin was arrested. Burata| Twenty-live Dead. Twenty-five persons were drowned following the bursting of a dam at Lake Dorkos, thirty miles northwest of Constantinople, Turkey. The lake supplies water for the capital. Santa Fe Adopta Telephone. The Santa Fe Railway has authorized the substitution of telephone for telegraph for train dispatching on its line from Bakersfield, Cal., to Albuquerque, N. M., a distance of 800 miles. Ileeord Shipment of Flonr. Every shipping record In the milling history of Minneapolis was broken Wednesday, when the railroads took out 556 cars containing 110,560 barrels of flour. Solid trains of flour were moved out by most of the roads. BIG JOB FOB GOHGBESS T a f t Outlines Enough Policies on His T r i p to Give W o r k f o r Whole Term. HARD TASK FOR T H E PRESIDENT Opposition to Some of His Ideas I s Expected—One-Tenth of Them as Laws Would Be Record. President Taft has already announced enough of the policies of his administration to keep Congress busy during the balance of his term. The policies already promulgated include almost every Issue upon which there has been any considerable difference of opinion between Republicans and Democrats and also between factions in the Republican party Itself. The scope of the left-over Roosevelt policies, so far as they relate to the Taft administration, h a s also been discussed. writes Leroy T. Vernon. Washington correspondent of the Chicago Daily News. Mr. T a f t has committed himself to the following policies: Creation of a central bank of Issue which shall control the treasury reserve, and take steps to alleviate currency stringencies. Creation of a postal savings bank system. Adoption of the proposed amendment to the constitution authorizing an income tax, to be enforced only in c a s j of national emergencies. Passage of a tax upon net incomes of corporations, a tax upon the Interest paid to bondholders. Recommendation that no further changes In the tariff be made during this administration. Correction of the evil of swollen fortunes by means of State Inheritance tax laws, rather than by a federal law Amendments to the anti-trust law, which shall apply exclusively to trade monopoly. Amendments to the Hepburn Interstate-commerce act which will segregate common carriers and subject them to regulatory laws, applicable only to themselves. Federal laws dealing with questions relating to labor. Including a federal law against boycott and one relating to the Issuance of Injunctions. Creation of a court to pass upon appeals from decisions fixing rates made by the Interstate-commerce commission. Authority for the commission to determine the proper classification of merchandise. Authority for the commission to initiate complaints of discrimination In rates. Granting the commission power to compel connecting carriers to unite In forming through routes and to fix a rate and apportionment thereof among tho carriers. Prohibition of railroads to hold stock In competing roads. Federal regulation through the Interstate-commerce commission of the Issue of railroad securities, which Issues must be for legitimate purposes and on a substantial basis. Authority for railroads to make agreements on rates approved by the commission. Advocacy of a compulsory law requiring Interstate railroads to adopt additional safety devices. Appointment of a congressional commission to Investigate the chuse of delays In the federal courts and to develop a system which will secure quick and cheap justice In the fedenil courts and serve as a model for the States. General conservation of national resources. Reclamation of arid lands and the Issuance of certificates tor that purpose. Preservation of forests. Deepening of waterways. Reorganization of the public land system. Passage of laws which would Impose restrictions upon the transfer of water rights to private control, so as to limit the control of the grant to fix the rental to be paid and regulate the rates to be charged. To separate the surface of the land from the mineral contents thereof, and either lease on a royalty system or sell coal and other deposits to miners. Reorganization of government departments, • particularly the departments of justice, the interstate-commerce commission and the bureau of corporations, so as to make the commission a court, the department of justice a prosecutor and the bureau of corporations an Investigator of violations of the commerce laws. Enforcement of the pure-food law. in respect to which the department of justice and the bureau of corporations shall occupy the same position as under the Interstate-commerce act. Clearer definitions of the statute relating to business. Prosecution and punishment of all violators of the law. International' peace and friendship and the development of closer relations with oriental nations. Ship subsidy for the development of a merchant m.frlne. to be paid for out of the profits of the ocean mall service. The job which the President has on his hands in the above is not an enviable one. Already there Is pronounced opposition to the creation of a central bank and of a postal savings bank system. The campaign for the adoption of the Income-tax amendment to the constitution Is already on and Is being hotly fought, particularly In the Eastern States. The corporation tax Is expected to have Its constitutionality questioned In the near future. If President Taft succeeds In placing on the statute books laws sustaining one-tenth of the policies for which he has taken his stand he will have equaled the record of any recent administration. The Comet I'holoicraphrd. A reproducible photograph of llalley's comet has been taken by Prof. Robert S. Lovett has been elected Frost and his assistants at the Yerkea president of the Union Pacific to suc- Observatory. Wllllems Bay, Wis. The ceed Edward H. Harriman. Mr. Lov- plate was exposed for two hours and ett was the closest adviser of Mr. Har- thirty minutes and Is thought to be riman and soon after his death was the first of its kind to be made since made a director of the Union Pacific. the return of this famous comet Lovett lleada the U. VALUABLE HOME RECIPE W i l l B r e a k Up Severeat Cold la a Day and Cure Any Carable Coash. Mix one-half ounce of Concentrated pine compound with two ounces of glycerine and a half pint of good whiskey. Shako thoroughly each time and use In doses of a teaspoonful to a Ublespoonful every four hours. This formula Is given out by a noted medical authority whose remarkable cures are well known to the profession. Local druggists say this mixture will work wonders for the treatment of all throat and lung diseases. Any druggist has these Ingredients or will get them for you from his wholesale house. The Concentrated pine comes only In half ounce bottles, each enclosed in an air-tight case, but be sure to get only that labeled "Concentrated." Ileadqaartera for the Jntee. Once upon a time a child who was asked upon an examination paper to define a mountain range replied, "A large sized cook stove." The same method of reasoning seems to go with older growth. A recent examination paper at the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale contained the question. "What Is the office of the gastric juice?" And the answer on one paper said, "The stomach."—Cleveland Leader. How's This? Wo offer One Hundred Dollan Reward for any cane of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Uall's Catarrh Cure. K. J. CHENEY k CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have knovrn F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any oblleatlons made by hla firm. WALDIXO. KINN'AM & M a a n x , Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting directly upon tho blood and mucou^ •urfacea of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Probably laaane. "Winkley Is a good deal of a crank. Isn't he?" "That doesn't half describe him. He's going around now Insisting that If the postoffice department has to be made self-sustaining the war and navy departments ought to be run the same way." S h a k e I n t o Your Shoea. Allen's F o o t - E a s e . It cures painful, swollen, smarting, sweatlrtg feet. M.-*kcs new s h o e s easy. Sold by all d r u g g i s t s and shoa stores. Don't accept a n y substitute. Sample F I t E E . Address A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy. N. Y. One Iteaort la An aching back is instantly relieved by an application of Sloan's Li n i men t This liniment takes the placo of massage and is better than sticky plasters. I t penetrates — without rubbing—through the skin and muscular tissue right to the bone, quickens tho blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent as well as temporary relief. Here's the Proof. C aS.E.,\VaahiBgton. - ?£?• ^ 1100 St-. D.C.. v r i t a a ; "ThlrtT yaars ago I fell from a acaffold and terfo i u l j Injured my back. I suffered tarrtblT at time* ; from tha small of my W k all around my s t o m a c h w a s l u l l ka if I had been beaten w i t h a elub. 1 uaed eyery plaatar 1 conld get w i t h no relief. Bloan'i Liniment took t h e pain rifhl o u t , and 1 c a n now d o as m u c h laddar work as any man i n t h a ahop, t h a n k , t o Sloan's Liniment Mr. J . P . E r a s s , of Mt. Airy, Ga., a a y i : " A f t e r being afflicted for thraa rears w i t h r h e o m a t l s m , ! used S l o a n ' s Llnlmant, and waa cured sound a n d we ll, and a m glad to aay I haren't been troubled w i t h r h e u m a t i s m alnce. My l e g waa badly swollen f r o m my hip t o my knee. One-half a bottle took t b a pain and swelling o u t . " Sloan's Liniment has no equal as a remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. Tjf SLOAN'S I INI MR NT' PriCM, 2Sc., 60c. and $ 1.00 Rloan'a book on huraea. cattle, aherp. •Jia p o u l t r y a e a i G-ee. Addreee 4 Dr. Earl S . Sloan, Boiton, Mass., U.S.A. l.cft. Mrs. Crawford—You say It Is Impossible to get any money out of your husband. Have you gone about It In the right way? Mrs. Crawford—I've tried everything, my dear, except sending him a Black Hand Letter.—Brooklyn Life. SICK H CARTER'S j dlgesUon and Too Ilcarty IVER Eating; A perfect remedy for Dizziness. Nausea. Drowsiness, Dad Tuste la t h » Mouth. CoaU*) Tongue, Pain in tho Side 1 TORPID LIVKR. They Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICL Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar is made to satisfy the smoker. The only thing most people acquire Is old age. M m . W l n a l o w a BOOTBINO S r a e r for Children teething; (oftene t h e Bum>, rednoee InQammaiion, allax* Pain, curee wind oollc. 25 o e n u a bottle. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simila Signature CARTERS ITTLE i VER PILLS. A R E YOU LOSING FLF.SII t h r o a t h m n c k l o c cough t h a t 70a cannot f f - r n to •beck! X bottl* of Allan'• t u n c Italuuu will cur* tha trouble and help you back to health. It may be difficult to find a solution of your troubles, but It Is safe to guess It doesn't He In telling them. uysi*psla.In- ITTLE Take a hint. Do your own mixing. Rough on Rats, .being all poison, one PILLS. 15c box will spread or make 50 to 100 little cakes that will kill 500 or more rata and mice. It's the unbeatable exterminator. Don't die In the house. Beware of Imitations, substitutes and regolato tho Bowels. catch-penny ready-for-use devices. A girl who is truthful about everything else will flb about the number of her admirers. t REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. (l.Mpcr N a m e s W a n t e d huo li'imlrol. Send lOr for ppoclal blank in work a t ODC«. N A H r. book outflt and beiln C O M P A N Y , B OIf X 400, CltOMWtlLL, I.N U Boys and Girls ZSUStt beautiful fountain p«n or roller ikafta, Write today. . s u c - m hupply f o m p a n j , IJrpt. 6 , N e r w a l k . Ohio No. 44—lOOO C. N . U. w HEN WDITINO TO ADVCBTISEDS PLEASE SAT ) s u s a * Iks atfverllseaesl la Ikls psptf. Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescription It the best of all medicines for the cure of diseases, disorders and weaknesses peculiar to women. It is the only preparation of its kind devised by a regularly graduated physician—an experienced and skilled specialist in the diseases of women. It is a safe medicine in ony condition of the system* T H E O N E REMEDY which contains no alcohol and no injurioua habit-formin|* dru£s and which creates no craTin^ for such stimulants. "THE ONE REMEDY so good that its makers ore not afraid to print its erery ingredient on cach outside bottle - wrapper and attest to the truthfulness of the same under oath. It is sold by medicine dealers everywhere, and any dealer who hasn't it ean fict it. Don't take a substitute of unknown composition for this mcdicine or KNOWN COMPOSITION. No counterfeit is as ^ood as the genuine and the drulgist who says something else is "just as good as Dr. Pierce's" is either mistaken or is trying to deceive you for his own selfish benefit. Such a man is not to ^o trusted. He is trifling with your most priceless possession—your healthmay be your life itself. SF* that you gft what yom ask for. P Smokeless Oil Heater T h e automatically-locking Smokeless Device Is an exclusive f e a t u r e of the P er fection O i l Heater. This Automatic Smokeless Device d o e s n ' t allow the wick to rise to a point w h e r e It C A N smoke, yet permits a strong flame that s h e d s a steady, glowing heat without a whiff of smoke. N o other heater in the world c o m p a r e s with the PERFECTION Oil Heater ( E q u i p p e d w i t h S m o k o l o s e Dovico) T u r n the wick high or low—no smoke, no smell. B u r n s for 9 h o u r s with one filling. T h e locking device on t h e inside of t h e d r a u g h t t u b e h o l d s the wick below t h e s m o k e z o n e — a l w a y s respond#, and automatically, insuring perfect combustion a n d u t m o s t b e a t without t h e slighte s t t r a c e of s m o k e . Oil I n d i c a t o r . D a m p e r t o p . Cool h a n d l e . I-inished in Nickel or J a p a n in a v a r i e t y of i t y l e i . • rar? Dealer Brarrwhare. to t b a If Noi V o a r s . W r i t a f o r h a a r c i t A i e o e y of t b a DeacrlptlTa STANDARD OIL COMPANY (locorporalaJ) P. ^WIZARD On. Clrealar ROTHBURY. Mrs. Dennis w e n t to G r a n d A proposition to bond Oceana R a p i d s last M o n d a y to visit h e r county f o r $50,000 f o r a new sister. c o u r t house a t H a r t is to be subE r n e s t G i l b e r t is g o i n g to mitted to t h e v o t e r s t h e c o m i n g move down n e a r Ann A r b o r s p r i n g election. T h e village of soon. H a r t is to buy t h e old c o u r t T h e r e is a lot of d i t c h i n g be- house f o r §5,000. ing done e a s t and w e s t of RothH a n y H e n d r i c k s , w h o conbury. d u c t s a r e s t a u r a n t and s o f t d r i n k Willie Zaviiz of Loroy, Mich., p a r l o r a t P r u i t p o r t , charged h a s been h e r e visiting his par- with selling liquor without a ents. He w a s called h e r e b y the license, was found g u i l t y by a d e a t h of A r t h u r , Willie s t a r t e d j u r y in t h e circuit c o u r t last f o r home Monday, his m o t h e r S a t u r d a y . a c c o m p a n i e d him as f a r as MusGov. W a r n e r h a s appointed kegon. E r n e s t Kinier of M u s k e g o n a s R e p o r t s a y s t h a t W. W . C o o r s one of t h e m e m b e r s of t h e s t a t e and family are to move to board of o p t o m e t r i s t s . W h i t e h a l l scon. Carl S t a u f f e r , w h o was s h o t while c a p t u r i n g Mrs. E. E. L o n g a t t e n d e d t h e in t h e a r m the d e s p e r a t e W. R. C. convention held in J a m e s Kelly, Whitehall last week Tuesday burglar at Ravenna, was pre sented with a h a n d s o m e revolvand W e d n e s d a y . er by h i s fellow t o w n s m a n F r i day night. FRIGHTFUL FATE A VKKTKD. County News. i I "1 would have been a cripple for life, from a terrible c u t on my knee c a p , " writes F r a n k Dlsberry, KelHher, Minn., w i t h o u t ilucklen's Arnica Salve, whiph soon cured me.'' in[ fallible for wounds, c u t s and bruisess 1 it soon cures burns, scalds, old sores L. C. bolls, skin eruptions. World's bes, for piles. 25c at Ripley's drug store.t GoldMEG^1^ Contest Was Strenuous. The old liglltj over the eqiializutlon Of (the couuty as to what proposition the city of Muskegon and outside townships should pay broke out again at the last meeting of the board of supervisors, and as usual, the country came out victorious. The final vote showed t h a t the country and North Muskegon voted solidly to raise the city 4.f» per cent after one of the hardest lights between the city and country members In the history of the board. IJy the action of the majority of the board last week Muskegon, will bear 65 per cent and the remaining county 35 per cent of the coming winter taxes. In other words $1,224,048 was added to Muskegon's equalized valuation and'$153,503 to the Muskegon Heights roll. $970,381 was de ductcd from the township rolls. •Supervisor Moran, who was lined up with the city In the light was taken ill In t he supervisors'room Friday and had to be taken to his hotel, not being able to participate In the final vote. , The city members who consider t h a t the board has saddt^d too large a proportion of the county's valuation upon them will appeal to a com mission composed of chosen ex-supervisors of adjoining counties. T h e last legislature passed an act permitting such procedure by cities. The contention of the Thomas report which was adopted was t h a t while the valuation of property had greatly Increased In the cltv during thejpast year, country'•property had decreased Montague's valuation was reduced $88,335. Whitehall's $01,010; White River's 951,810. T h e budget for the coming year calls for $175,278.11 of s t a t e and coun- chills and malaria. Only 2oc. ty taxes to be raised this year, or Ulpley & Co. $28,051.71 m i r e t h a n last year. T h e big increase comes in making up a $10,000 deliclt in the contingent fund, and because the s t a t e tax is about $17,000 higher t h i s year t h a n last -year. Because of the lowered equalizations of the townships they FOR will not feel much of the effects of t h e increased budget, t h e burden falling on city lax payers. Congressman J a m e s C. McLaughlin was given permission b r t h e board to use the board of supervisors' room, circuit court room aod Horticultural society's room in the county building for the corn contest in November. Because he Is injured and unable to work at his vocation,* Deputy Sheriff Carl tjiauffer, of Ravenna, was voted $100 by t h e board, in a resolution commending him for his brave action in capturing James Kelly. GUARANTEED THE GREATEST CURE 10 COUGHS" COLDS KING'S HEW DISCOVERY C U R E FOR C r o u p , W h o o p i n g C o u g h , Bronchitis, La Grippe, Quinsy, H o a r s e n e s s , H e m o r r h a g e of t h e L u n g s , W e a k n e s s of t h e L u n g s , A s t h m a and all diseases of T H R O A T , LUNGS A N D CHEST T U E 1IED-ROCK OF SUCCESS lie.s in a keen, clear brain, backed by indomitable will and resistless energy .Such power comes from t h e splendid health t h a t Dr. K i n g ' s New Life Pills impart. They vitalize every organ and build up brain and body. J . A. Harmon, Lizemore, W Va., writes; They are the best pills I ever used.'' 25c at Ripley's drug store. PREVENTS P N ^ J M O N I A Eleven years ago Dr. K i n g ' s New Discovery permanently cured me of a severe and dangerous throat and lung trouble, and I ' v e been a well man ever since.—G. O. Floyd, Merchant, Kershaw, S. C. Coat Sale We have on hand a few Ladies and Children's coats which we are almost giving Hway. Ladies long black coats a t $3 00. Children's warm coats a t $1.50 and $2.00. Mis. M. G. Hollis. AND 51.00 PRICE 50o SOLD A N D GUARANTEED BY GO WITH A KITSI1. L. G. RIPLEY & Co., Montague. T h e demand for t h a t wonderful stomach, liver an i kldnev cure, Dr Kind's New Lit - Pills—is asloundinj,' say thev neyi r saw the like. I t s because they never fail t o cure sour stomach, constipation, inrliyestion, billousiuss, jaundice, sick headache limwmmumfmmmmnmwiwmtfmm,, | 2 M O R E DAYvS ^ " 2 | 1 Potter Bros, Mm j —•C | Fall Opening Sale i s still on. g Variety Jn style, 5amenea5 in high quality of material and comfort due to Ralston anatomical lasts and peculiar five-layered sole construction. This accounts for Ralston popularity with all men. There's everything from the "snappy" models for the college man to the less extreme h but distinctive models for the business IJ and professional man. Only two more days. Always graceful, always coming, always comfortable. | T If you have no decided preference for a particular style of shoe, and want general satisfaction for all kinds of street or dress wear, ask any Ralston dealer for = Stock No. 132 JE rr rr 1 liose t h a t h a v e n o t t a k e n a d v a n t a g e of t l i i s s a l e h a v e missed a rare b a r g a i n event. F o r the Closing =§ Days we are going to give a special C u t P r i c e on all S L a d i e s , MiBses a n d C h i l d r e n ' s 2 Coats, Skirts and O u r C o a t s a r e all t h i s s e a s o n ' s s t y l e s g Dress Goods. gr brand new and np-to-dnte a n d ^ p r i c e s a r e r i g h t d o w n t o B e d Rock-. you will find our Gun Metal Blucher "Solace" Last ^3 UNION M A D t W . E. N E L S O N Whitehall. 2 M U R P H Y ' S STUDIO. § Green's Block. WHITE HALL. I S O P E N F O R B U S I N E S S E V E R Y DAY Photos in all styles and grades.; likeness ' h a t will please, a picture that will suit, a t t h e lowest popular prices. Kinishlnu done for a m a t e u r s . Pict u r e f r a m i n g done to o r d e r . P i c t u r e s enlarged a t lowest prices. All work g u a r a n t e e d . Given FREE Weeks Only Silver Aluminum Jelly Molds With The mold holds o n e pint. Will not rust or tarnish. Should last a life time. W o r t h 5 0 cents. MminY„C,0Ni I s m *{ e 10 7 n ' v o r s " (bey are ill f o o o T — Nilhons of hoiuekeepers use JELLYCON. so should you. i Z R n l C E \ ,0c- P E R PACKAGE Stre the Ditmond Irade-auiks lor other oilers in package. Mrs. Lizzie J o h n s o n h a s gone to C h i c a g o to s p e n d t h e winter. D u r i n g h e r absence Miss M a r y J o h n s o n will k e e p h o u s e f o r h e r father. FLO WER^ZREEK. William B a n k s l e f t last week for two weeks' vacation to be s p e n t with r e l a t i v e s a t Chicago and E l g i n , e v e r y p u r c h a s e of t h r e e packages of ELLYCON T H E P E R F E C T J E L L Y DESSERT / Y o u r g r o c e r will s h o w you t h e molds. O r d e r J E L L \ C O N N O W and s e c u r e o n e of t h e s e b e a u t i f u l molds b e f o r e they a r e ail g o n e . If your g r o c e r d o e s n o t sell Jellycon, leave your o r d e r w i t h him f o r t h r e e p a c k a g e s with a mold f r e e , he & will get it f o r you. W e m a k e this e x t r a o r d i n a r y o f f e r t o inW duce vou to try J e l l y c o n , W e w a n t you to k n o w h o w g o o d Jellycon is, h o w much b e t t e r it is than t h e Imitation Brands. J u s t noticc t h e rich, delicious flavors. It excels in e v e r y w a y . / ^ NOTICE TO RETAIL GROCERS—If you have not already ordered a stock of JELLYCON MOLD CASES, place your order at once. All the Wholesale Grocers in the State have them. Everyone of your customers will be sure to call for three packages of Jellycon with a mold free. E i S t BURNHAM CO., Mfrs., 53-61 Gansevoorl St., Mew York }7/ontaff tie b u s i n e s s ^Directorym J P. J A C O B S O N GROCERIES & PROVISIONS Wi-'vb got It, we'll it or lis not lu loWn. Siitlsrnrllau or money returncrl. C. F C O R D E S , t JOHN JAGER. BOOTS, SHOES, RUBBERS. S H I P P E R S , ETC. Phone 579 Shoe lU'pairing a specialty. J A C O B GRAF, \ L a t e s t S t y l e s of F i n e F o o t w e a r , and t h e best w o r k i n g Shoos. GUOCKHV & BAKERY T h e Hentof r v c r y l l i l n ^ I h o i i i a r k e t n l T o n l s . C h o i c e D.-ilry Biili«r. Kn-sh Kjf«» nml Vegetable^ K ' - p d i r i u e a SJp^uJ^lly. Phone 00. Also a complete line of up-tn date Wall Paper. N. G AXEL C JOHNSON, OSTERHOUSE, m a n u f n e t u r e r o r and d e a l e r l u G E N E R A L MERCHANDISE" 1 ry o u r SjH-cml Lnbel llrond of 25 a n d 30c. Colfeew h l e h is eqiml u . n a y 40.-. coffec o n t h e m a r k e t A I rial will c u m luce y o u . Phone 90. Hand Made H a r n e s s , ' Collars, Robes, Whips, etc. Harness and Shoe Repair In?. Now nulldlDK 3rd door s o u t h of r u n n e r s IMnk. J. W . W A T K I N S , V . E. P H E L A N , UNION MEAT MARKET G e n t s Clothincr at d F u r n i s h i n g s Hots, Caps, Mittens, Etc. Choice Cuts nt Hensonable Prices. Everything worn by Man or Hoy. Phone .r)4. R I P L E Y BLOCK. PAUL A. GERNER. B u i l d i n g Contractor R I F F L E & BOYDEN, Carpenters and General Contractors M r s . D a v e Black was t a k e n q u i t e sick last week, Dr. HarP l a n s n u d Kstlliialca r u r u l s h e d o n n n y kind of rington b e i n g called, s h e is some Phone 39 A. huildliiK e o n s l r u c t t o n . b e t t e r now. MON TA G U E, MICH '36. MONTAGUE. MICH. E l m e r B a x t e r is t h e p r o u d o w n e r of a new top b u g g y . I. 1' t 9' 5 < i • > J O H N T. C O O P E R MD Practicing Physician and Surgeon. Mrs. A c k e r s o n and M i s s E t h e l Diseases of W o m a n i a n d Children a Osborn l e f t f o r L o w e l l today, sp-eialiy. MeniVr of surgical and the former as delegate for t h e medical staffllacklcy Hospital Office Missionary society and t h e l a t room T, Lawrence Blk. Wcstefn Ave., •Muskegon, Mich. Citizens ter f o r t h e S t a n d a r d B e a r e r s . Specific i Mi i n n u i l K-llinnl."» C l i e e r f u l l y I* u r n i s h e i i mnl nil onli rs |in>inptly ni l e n d e d to. SILVERWARE Harvey H u s t o n and Otto G l a z o n e r w e r e t r y i n g the s p e e d of t h e i r r e s p e c t i v e h o r s e s S u n day n i g h t , t h e l a t t e r - w e n t too d o s e to J o h n E a s t m a n ' s b u g g y which was a h e a d of t h e m and look off his hind wheel. O t t o paid '$4.50 and called it s q u a r e . J o h n Meinert will h a v e a s a l e within a f e w weeks, he h a v i n g rented a f a r m on t h e S o u t h side jf M u s k e g o n and will m o v e t h e r e this fall. T h e F . C. L. A. society will meet with Mrs. R o b t . Deyman next week W e d n e s d a y . WHITE RIVER. L y n n S u m n e r of C h i c a g o s p e n t S a t u r d a y and S u n d a y with his p a r e n l s , M r . and Mrs. G. A. Sumner. Miss K a t e H u b b a r d returned Thursday night from Muskegon. Mrs. A. B. S u m n e r s p e n t Saturday and S u n da,, in M u s k e g o n , t h e g u e s t of Mr. and Mrs. F r e d Sumner. Saturday aft-irnoon was s p e n t with Mrs. R o b e r t Caithness, an old friend, who is also v i s i t i n g in t h e c i t y . " t C. H . B U T Z E R , L M PHELPS, P o s t & D a r b y of Whitehall w h o l c s n l e a u d r e t a i l d e a l e r in h a v e sold t h e i r v a u d e t t e to W. high grade C O A L A N D W O O D W. Coon & Son of R o t h b u r y , F r e s h , S a l t and S m o k e d Meats. Lowest Prices Full weight. Orders P o u l t r y nud G a m e In SfllHOO. who will h e r e a f t e r c o n d u c t t h e a m u s e m e n t plaCe. Phoiie ci. Promptly tilled. Phone »U. T h e "Harvest Home" supper, which was given a t the h o m e of Mr. and Mrs. M M. F u l k e r s o n last week T h u r s d a y n i g h t was a success, r e g a r d l e s s of t h e wind and rain. T h e h o u s e w a s well filled and e v e r y o n e r e p o r t s most e n j o y a b l e e v e n i n g and a tine supper. T h e proceeds a m o u n t e d to $11 45. WEEKLY CATALOGUE 1 Miss B e r t h a Benson r e t u r n e d from M u s k e g o n T u e s d a y n i g h t to s p e n d the r e m a i n d e r of t h e week with h e r p a r e n t s . T h e Co. N o r m a l , which Miss B e r t h a is a t t e n d i n g closed school so t h a t t h e t e a c h e r s could a t t e n d the t e a c h e r s ' association a t Saginaw. A r t h u r Runzel. Miss A n n a Loosemore, Miss M a r t h a Runzel and J o h n M e y r s were g u e s t s of Mrs. R u d o l p h R e h b e m last Sunday. N A r e wedding bells to r i n g in W h i t e R i v e r in t h e n e a r f u t u r e ? Miss Emily S m i t h of Chicago, who h a s been a' g u e s t a t the h o m e of Mr. and Mrs. William B l o c k e r for s o m e time, r e t u r n e d to h e r h o m e last week. S h e was a c c o m p a n i e d home by h e r cousin. Will Bonks, w h o will s p e n d two w e e k s in t h a t city. Dr. and Mrs. A. F . H a r r i n g ton and Miss Minnie B u t z e r were e n t e r t a i n e d at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F r e d Meinert S u n day. Miss E d i t h F r i d a y w e n t to C h i c a g o T u e s d a y w h e r e s h e will spend t h e w i n t e r . A r t h u r M e i n e r t c a m e over f r o m M i l w a u k e e S a t u r d a y and r e t u r n e d V/ednesday. J . E. S t o b b e was in M u s k e g o n Tuesday. Miss Nellie Cockerill r e t u r n e d to h e r school in C l a y b a n k s Sund a y a f t e r e n j o y i n g a two w e e k s ' vacation. S e r v i c e s Ger. A m e r . B a p t i s t c h u r c h . S. S. 0 a. m. M o r n i n g service G e r m a n 10 a. m. B. Y. P. U. m e e t i n g 7 p. m.. s u b j e c t : Island Missionary heroes, leader. E a r l Y e o m a n . 7:30 T h u r s d a y , Illustrated sermon, subject: T u r k e y without t h e Bible. Tuesday e v e n i n g B. Y. P . U., meeting Bible s t u d y 7:30. T h u r s d a y e v e n i n g p r a y e r m e e t i n g 7:30. Come in and look o v e r my b r a n d new stock of S i l v e r w a r e ' Souvenir Spoons, etc.. s u i t a b l e f o r w e d d i n g or birthday gifts. Phone 78!). l All g o o d s s t r i c t l y as represented a n d sol I a t lowest .prices. I n a v e a new line of w a t c h e s , clocks & r i n g s . 1 ^ L o w e s t P r i c e s to all. A. J. GLADSTONE DOWIE ATTORNEY AT LAW and NOTARY PUBLIC, LINDERMAN BLOCK WIIITKU ALL. - MICH. mortfgaee Sale Defiiult h n s b w o m a d e i n thi- p : i v m u n t of t h e m o n e y securvd bv u luongiiKe d a t e d , May £3, 1900 a x « c u t « d b y S t e p h e n II. t l i n k and C b r l i t m n a C l i n k , b i t w i f e , of Maekugoii, M i c h i g a n to C l i f t o u U. Sti-Tfiis of MM siuue piac», w h i c h I inortnag* was r c o o r d o d lu i N office o f t h e iReifl*i t e r of d e e d s of t h e C o u n t y of Muskegon. M ic b ie a n , l u L i b e r 9 0 o ' M o r t g a g r a o n uftgM 173 a n d H73, on May 4.1900. 1 A n d w h e r e a s by a n I n s t n i i u e i i t d u l y e x e c u t e d Jeweler, Montague, Mich. by said C l i f t o n 1>. S t e v e n s b e u r i n g d a t e March 7. IWM. a n d r e c o r d c J lu s a i d R e g u t e r ' s ofllce lu i L i b e r 10' of M o r t g a g e s on Pag® 108. t h e r e wa« rer y B x y y - f f ; - ha I l u a v l Irani t a l d i n o r t ^ a ^ e i h e S o u t h half of t h e N v r l h w e s t q u a r t e r of. S e c t i o n t h i r t y - o u o ' (SI), T o w n ten (10) N o r t h . Kanue f o u r i e e n ( H i Wes - ; A n d w h e r e a s Ihe a m o u n t cl.-tiined to b - d u e on said u i o r t ' i a i ; c a t I h e d a t e of I b i s n o t i c e i> t h e Mlui o t ° ^ | t . 7 5 o f p r i n c i p a l a u d i n t e r e s t aud t h e f u r t h e r autu ol §15.00, us :iu a t t o r u e v fee S t i p u l a t ed f o r m said m o r t g a g e , and w h i c h is t h e whole iininHiit tHaiin<-d lo be u u p u i d o n >aid uiortgajje. s u d nn suit or proctfedlnr b u s tieim l u s t U n t M HI law to r c o o v e r t h e d i bi now r e m a i n i n g , s e c u r - d Bifocal or d Ulbio Fight '.d lenses en- by >;iid inar'.ga^e o r a n y p « r t t h e r e o f , w h e n t b y t h e power of sale c o i i t a i u o l In said m o r t g a g e h a s abling the wearer to see plainly both becoine o p e r a t i r e . t h e r e f o r e , n o t i c c is h e r e b y g i v e n t h a t by in the distance or close by such as v i rNow, t u e of s a i d p o w e r of •Mb*, a n d in p e r s u a o c o l o f t h e s t a t u t e i u s u c h case m a d e a u d p r u v i d e d , t h e reading, sewing, etc.. fitted by me said uiorlgHge will be f o r e c l o s e d by a sale of t h e both in the cement style or In one p r e m i s e s t h e r e i n d e s c r i b e d (aiid I n o t released i h e r e f r o m , a t p u b l i o a u c t i o n . to the highest bidglass. Bifocal lenses lilted by me d e r , a t t h e f r o n t door of t h e C o u r t H o u s e , i n t b « glvfe perfect vision and comfort. C i t y of M u s k e g o n , in said C o u n t y of Muskegon o u t h e 21st d a y of F e b r u a r y 1910, at ten o'clock i u P W E N T V SKVKN* VKALIS e x p e r i e n c e i s t h e f o r e n o o n of t h a t d a y , m b i c h said preralse« to sold a r e d e s c r i b e d a s f o l l o w s , t o w l t : t h e a t your service, and my charges are be N o r t h half of t h e N o r t h w e s t q u a r t e r of S e c t i o n e (31). T o w n s h i p ten (10) N o r t h , a a u g * NO m o i l Kit than that, of Inexperienced tf ho ui rrtiye -eon n(14) West. traveling opticians. I do NOT TUAVEL D a t e J O c t o b e r 30,1909. D. S t e v e n s , Mortgagee. or employ traveling opticians. Lo- N i m s L'rwiu, V n n d eClifton rwerp AFoote, A i t o r u e y s f o r Morijjagee. cated per man My, U u i l n e s s A d d r e s s : Muskejfon, Mich. S. FEHRENBACH. Ernest Eimer Opt. D. 53 Western A ve—np siairs. M I T S K E G O N , MICH FIRE MARINE, ACCIDENT and S U N LIFE INSURANCE. Ottice o v e r -lacobson's Grocery Store. Oflice H b u r s 0 a, m. to 12 m. 1 p. m. to 4 p. m. I. L. LANFORD Montague, Mich. The Burning Question of the D a y ! A r e you g e t t i n g Coal S a t i s f a c t i o n GOOD HARD SENSE GOOD HARD CASH GOOD HARD COAL L e h i g h and F r e e B u r n i n g H a r d Coal in Nut. S t o v e and E g g size. In S o f t Coal we h a v e t h e B e s t Washed E g g and H o c k i n g Domestic C h u n k s . Be s u r e to see us b e f o r e buying. Erickson=Steffee Co. Tel. 507 Whitehall, Mich, Electric Bitters Succeed when everything else fails. In nervous prostration and female weaknesses they arc the supreme remedy, as thousands have testifiedFOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND STOMACH TROUBLE it is the best medicine ever sold over a druggist's counter. . A t a suasion of -aid c o u r t , held at t h e p r o b s l e oflloe. In t h e C l t ) of M u s k e g o n In said c o u u t y , o n t h e SOth d a y of S e p t e t u b e r A. U. IPOS. P r e s e n t : H u n Klllott I). P r e s c o t t , Jud</c of Probate. In th<- m a t t e r of t h e e s t a t e of E l i j a h W, Sayers. M e n t a l l y I n c o m p e t e n t . Jsamuel H. Hayers h a v i n g Hie 1 In said c o u r t h i s p e t i t i o n a l l e g i n g t h a t said filljah W. S a j r e r s is a m e n t a l l y I n c o m p e t e n t person, n u d p r a y i n g t h a t he o r s o m e o t h e r s u i t a b l e person l e a p p o i n t e d as g u a r d i a n of h i s uurson s u d e s t a t e . It is o r d e r e d . T h a t ihe 1st d a y of N o v e m b e r , A. I). 1909, at ten o'clock In t h e lorc'noon, ui said p r o b a t e office, be a u d it h e r e b y a p p o i n t e d f o r h e a r lug oild p e t i t i o n : It Is f u r t h e r o r d e r e d . F h a t noil.-.- thereof be u l v e n b y pi-rsonal servloo of a c o p y of t h i s o r d e r u p o n snld Klllah \V. Sityera and u p o n - u c h of his n e a r e s t relative* a u d p r e s u m p t i v e b e l r s - n t - l a w as reside w i t h i n said c o u u t r , a t least f o u r t e e n d a y s p r e T l o u s to said d a y of h e a r i n g : A n d It Is f u r t h e r u r d r n ' d . T h a t notice t h e r e o f bo g i v e n to all o t h e r s of hia n e a r e s t r e l a t i v e s a u d p r e s u m p t i v e h e l r s - a l - l a w by 11 p u b l i c a l i o n of a copy of t h i s o r d e r , for t h r e e successive w e e k s p r e v i o u s to said day of hearliiK, In t h e M o n t a g u e O b s e r v e r , a uewsp,i|>er p r i n t e d a n d c i r c u l a t e d In said c o u n t y . Elliott D. P r e s c o i t . ludgi-of P r o b a t e . A Irue c o p y . Ituth T h o m p s o n , R e g i s t e r of P r o b a i o , / V \ o r t t s Sal«» U e f a u l t IIUVIUK been m a d e in Uie coiidltlous of a c e r t a i n real e s t a t e inort^aite e.\e<Tule<l on t h e 4th d a y of Uoceuiber, IW8. by I he M u s k e g o n Milling C o m p a n y , a c o r p o r a t i o n , o f Muskegon, MMilgau, to T h e Micbiiciu r r u s t C o i u p a u y , a c o r p o r a t i o n , of G r a n d K a u i d s . M l b b l g a u . w h l e b said morU-a^e w a a r e c o r d e d w i t h t h e R e g i s t e r of Uee<ls of Musk e u o u C o u u t y . M i c h i g a n , ou D e c e m b e r 4, ImB, In Liber 113 of M o r t igM a g e as nt p a g ePS s 185-188: 1^-188; A n d W h e r o a s . t h e u n i o a u t cliilmod to be d u e a t t h i s d a t e upon Ihe i n d e b t e d n e s s ^i-cun-d by siiid m o r t gage is t h e s um of K o r r l e o p T h o u K a n d Five H u n d r e d E i g h t y - s e v e n d o l l a r s a n d uo s u i t o r proceedi n g s ai law or In c h a n c e r y h a v i n g b e e n I n g l l t u t e d to r e c o v e r t h e d e b t afon-'said o r a n y p a r t t h e r e o f : Now. T h e r e f o r e , n o t i c e la h e r e b y g i v e n t h a t , by v i r t u e of t h e p o w e r of sale c o n t a i n e d i n said m o r t g a g e a n d . in p u r s u a n c e of t h e s l u t u t e l a s u c h c a s e uiude a n d p r o v i d e d , snld iiiorlE.t*r will be foreclosed by u gale of (be p r e m i k e s t h e r e i n d e s c r i b e d , b e i n g l o t Five and t h e east, lb i r t y - e i g h t teet of Lot F o u r a n d tbi* west t b i r f y f e e t of Lot Six lllock O n e of t h e C i t y of M u s k e g o n , s i t u a t e d ou Lot * ine, Section N i n e t e e n , T o w n T e a , n o r t h R a n g e S i x t e e n w e s t : also k n o w n a s Lot F o u r , lllock Five l l u u d r e d F i f t y - f o u r of t h e Revised P l a t of i h e City of M u s k e g o n , a p p r o v e d a u d adopted by I h e C o u n c i l of Mid C i t y , A p r i l {I, 1<j03, at p u b l i c a u c t i o n a t t h e frool d o o r of t h e C o u r t lion*.- in t h e C i t y of Miiskvgon, Mich..f>n t h e first day of N o v m b e r , I'JW, st ton o'clock In t h e f o r e noon. H a t e d , August 2, IDOj. T h e Mlcbioan T r u s t C o m p a n y , Mortgagee. Nlius, Krwin, > a n d e r w e r p A Poole. AtUirueys f o r M o r t g a g e e . /V\ O f t £ a ®• T h e r e is now d u e " " p a i d on u c r t a i u m o n g a c e d a t e d M* 1 ,®" J » W , » n d recorde<l i u the nffii-e of t h e o f U e e d l for t h e C o u u t y of H u s k e g o n a n d 8 , » t e w f M i c h i g a n o n J u n e u , IWW. I n Liber l l 8 o f A I O r l i - ' a g e s on p a g e made a u d e x e c u t e d b\ J o b " AUaui* u» K m m a F. T a y l o r , t h o s u m of T>vo l l u u d r e J t m y - n x a n d M-lOO dollnrs for p n n c t p i l I n t e r e s t . To s a t i s f y said d e b t a m i also to s a u s f f t h e c u s U o f sale. I n e l u d i n g a n a t t o r n e y lee of F f l e i n dollars, t h e s a i d m o r t g a g e will be foreclosed by a bmIo of t h e p r e m i s e s d e s c r i b e d t h e r e i n ( s u b j e c t to tb^ a m o u n t h e r e a f t e r to beeoiuc d u e i l ; o n s.iid m o r t g a g e ) , bei n g t h e S o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r of S e c t i o n T h l r t v - o n * (311,1u.Town Twelve (1*> n o r t h . R a n g e Fift«-en (16) w e s t , c o l f l a l u l n g o n e h u n d r e d s i x t y a n d SS100 acres of Innil, m o r e or less, a n d b e i n g l u t h e T o H i i s h l p of I l o l t o n , M u s k e g o n C o u n t y , M i c h i g a n , a t tMiblle a u c t i o n a t t h e f r o n t d o o r of t h e C o u r t l l o u s c lu I h e City of U n s k c g o u , M i c h i g a n , on t h e 29th d a y of Moveiober, l-iili. a t ten o'clock in t h e f o r e n o o n U a l e d , A u g u s t 30, KM). Kmiua F . Taylor, M o r t g a g e e . N l m s , K r w i n . V a n d e r w e r p ^ Foote, A t t o r n e y s for M o r t g u j o e .