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let ao.oat 5O.O0C nk. .ftAf ,oook fi ntt mil, SHU 1 i Lake lew Hancock Needs More SchOOl liOOin iui. Her Pupils. HoItal At Hancock the He Appointed m Slarlne . - .iiitctlonln JIopliai-!"'" jl alitor k ToUy ne Hancock icbool board find- the I of an additional Bchool building n It has been decided to build ci four worn icbool and It will be locateu iu prowdinc injjpopuio"""- , . 0 the school, especally in the lower . at on 18 rrp""-"' rooms, and some oi lur 'Mma IW ' n.j tintA htir dud 8 come hon eompeueu w yeiu V r 1 4knf nil mnv HA I 1- jjaja day in orunr ium - Z ed schoolin,. The locating of the ..hmldineia Went Hancock will place this crowing popula- J" iwen 15.000 and 10,000 will liuu. - , be (.pent in bujiDg a sue ium c..u hniMnff. 'ineDOBIU uc, . nt teachers, excepting Mies Kenten- bacb, of the Itedridge school, who baa re signed. i ; nrobable that St. Marv'a hospital t Hancock will shortly be appointed a marine hospital, application having been made to the proper department ai v uu :.nn There is considerable red tape huanMB about getting such an appoint ment, but when appointed it draws its fees in cases brought to it from vessels direct from the government. Every sail- .!0ntit!..d to such service cn account nfhiBOwn and theboat owners' contribu tion to the marine hospital fund. Thus eyery new hospital appointed is a direct gain (or the sailor, an it increase a his chances of being nearone when taken gick. The want of a marine nonpuai ut Portage Lakehas often been expressed the navigators making these port? and the appointment of St. Mary s will be a gain both for them and the hospital. Saturday was registration day lor the jpecial election, held today, in Hancock. About 350 new names were added to the list. After crosbing irom tne registra tion bookB the names of those dead or re moved from town there remained about 750 names. The new names added to the lint are not by any means all those of i i newiy acquired cu mi AA though a few may p"7 tration in the villa newly acquired citizens of Hancock, nl- be. The small regis- village has been due to there having been no contest over visage elections for many years. The report of the condition of the First National Bank of Hancock, just issued, I bqohb resources of 1807,803; loans and discounts, of $491,301. Deposits now amount to $572,121.55. and undivided m " profits are $15,485. The report of the bupenor Savings Bank shows resources of 1337,403; loans and discounts $185,- 663, Commercial deposits amount to (47,853, ane savings deposits to $158,- 228, Messrs. August IMto, J. II. Jasberg, A. Thorpe and J. Helinhund, a commi'tee of the directors of tbe Finnish college at Hancock, visited Marquette during the past week for tbe purpose of looking up lite lor tbe permanent location of the , college. This committee will report to tneynod which meets here June 1. m Fantera, who has been at St. Alary a hospital since tbe accidental ehooting of himself in the f boulder, is not getting on as well as shortly after the ac- cidenr. Fears are now entertained for big ultimate, recoYery, so far has the poisoning of the arm, by discharges from me wound, extended. Among the cases on the June calendar the supreme court are two from UouRhtoncountv: Ed rfnrtnn. nrnnon dent and appellant, vs Michael Hurton, contf stant, and Allan Kirkpatnck, plain- "o and appellant, vs William Mehlilltch, ueienaant. an "em In Saturday's issue was a little confusing, owing totbe"comD" omitting 7eral words. It should have read that cJr he graduating exercises of St. Patrick's convent school will occur at St. Patrick's uau the eyening of June 22. Dr. J. E. Scallon left today for Chicago "ucre D9 wm Indulge in a month's raca- iion. Thedoctnr'a nM.tiAn mil nn. C d ,18t n attending the rlinli n! n Unrnhf. --..uuwuea surgeon, and 8ltlDK tbe hospitals. The Long theatre company commences peek's engement at St. Patrick' "an tnis evening. On Saturday night a "uilU U1CVCIA Will ha n.A f lockyticketholder. some Fob Salk-a number of piece- of resl. property in the Tillage of nancock -F-jr v -oan E.lckson, office In Scot t There wtlibe Memorial exercises at the V. T BcnoI FridJ afternoon, to which lu a !riend8 01 tne Popilsarein 4 an eveninir . . V vuv (UWIVIiUUlCUV 11 M, E. church hv tnmK-M t. orth League. 'MY WIFE LUCY." A llrrlti That She Inflated Should Da Lived Up To. Years ago, when tho western part of New York state was a now country, a youn? man brought m briclo to the humble cabin homo ho had prepared for her. The bridowas young, tall, straight and muscular, with a fiuo head, bright eyes and red cheeks. Physically and mentally 6he was strong. She. had been "raised" by a thrifty mother and taught to work in a sensible way. She had brought to her husband a "good Bcttiu out." Her own clothing and household linen she had spun, woven and made herself, and there was a good ly amount of it. Her parents had given her a huge feather bed and pillows, a bedstead, three chairs, a table, dishes and hollow ware. So when John had finished his houso, bought a horse, cow, pigs and chickeus, they felt quite "fore handed and were ready to marry. When John Chalmers asked her to be his wife, 6ho had answered him in this way: ' we 11 make a bargain first. If I marry you, i ll do tno cooking, wash- L 6Crubliug milkiug cmunluf?( spinning, sewing, knitting, feeding tho i.i ,ii ... , ? cmtni'im uiui Kwimia wiu nuuso cieau. 111 t ! .. t . . . t xou u Dring in woou and water, make tne nro in tno morning and do tno rest of tho work. Is it a bargain?" "Yes, Lucy, it's a bargain." "Then I'll marry you; but, John Chalmers, remember a bargain's a bar gain, and don't you never depend on me to do your work, nor think of it for you either, for I won't." Two weeks after their marriage ho 6aid to her ono morning: "Lucy, I'm going to bring Mr. Williams homo to dinner. Ho's going to bo a great man some day, and ho's worth having for a friencL HaVe a tiptop dinner Good by, dear." Ho gavo her a hearty kiss, and without waiting for an answer ho mounted his horso and rode quickly away for the town. At noon ho return ed with his friend. Before they reached tho cabin ho heard Lucy's voice singing merrily, and ho caught sight of tho back of a short gown and petticoat sur mounted by a capacious splint sunbou net. Seemingly 6ho did not hear them, and John was about to call her when it suddenly came to his mind that ho had brought in neither wood nor water that morning. Ho had been forewarned, but ho had not profited thereby. Now he must meet tho consequences and settle his own shortcomings with his guest. He need expect no help from that inde pendent young woman. His heart was heavy and his stomach light as they ap proached the cabin. He missed tho ap petizing odors that were wont to greet him, such as proceed from hot corn cakes, fried bacon and eggs. Tho sweet smell of baking potatoes and bread did not greet him at the threshold as they entered. Tho teakettle hung from ono hook on tho crane, but it was not singing. An iron kettlo was suspended from another hook. Two long handled frying pans had corn cakes and thin slices of bacon nicely arranged in them. Potatoes wero washed ready for roasting. Two loaves of bread were in the oven and a pio was waiting for tho flro. Tho room was faultlessly neat. Her work was done. John scratched his head thoughtful ly. Then he burst into a laugh that shook the cabin and echoed and re-echoed through the woods. Mr. Williams join ed, forgetting for tha timo that ho was very hungry and had been invited to a dinner which for lack of wood and wa ter was not in a tempting condition, al though perfect of its kind. Turning to Mr. Williams, John sam: "My wife Lucy is a smart woman, but she hasn't got u 6mart husband." Hcaso sit down, Mr. Williams, and excuse me for awhile." Ho went out, but soon re turned with wood and water. After starting tho fires and filling tho toaket tle ho Eat down beside his friend and told him about the contract which he had entered into beforo his marriage. "Some women would havo brought wood and water when company was ex pected, but not my wife Lucy. She s a woman to be proud of, she is." As he said this Lucy appeared In the doorway she gave their guest a hearty handshake and welcome. Then without apology she attended to finishing the work 60 well begun, and later the hun gry trio did full justice to a delicious meal. When they had finished, she said to Mr. Williams: Don't vou think a bargain's a bar gain and ought to be stuck to whether it's made with a man or wun a wo- man? And Mr. Williams answered with Ada V. Slater. sincerity: 'I do." Sitting Astride. Mrs. H. P. Colearovo of Chicago has invented a costume for lady horseback Hdora who wish to sit astride, lhe hao it ia so made that when the rider is dis mounted it appears like au ordinary MBS. COLEQROVB IN CROSS BADDLK HABIT, itreet dross, A casual glance at an equestrienne seated astride would fail r ...tklnn vmnanal ill thd Viewed from either I (Til V VWi ..... alria tha rider amjears much like one seated in th ordinary sidesaddle. PSUEDO MEMORY. IT i MANIFESTATIONS AND CAUSES . THAT ARE ASSIGNED. Curioti 1 Hunt ration That Have a Familiar Appt aranco to Mauy of Va What Some Famoua Men Have 8all Concerning ThU Tntererttlug fcubjnt. An Irishman onco reforml to what hafl bon oalli'd psoudd nu inory as tho memory that ho had of things that never happened to him, but a inoro exact definition tells us that it consists in tho belief that a new ftato has been previously experienced, so that when tho stnto Is produced for tho first timo it seems familiar. Or, as Wen dell Holmes says, "All nt once a conviction flashes uj)on us that wo havo been In the same preclso circumstances as at tho pres ent Instant once or many times before" n sort of feeling that makes some peoplo think they aro ghosts. Ho adds Jocularly that the feeling cannot bo tho memory of a previous stato of existence, for ho gives tho case of a student who, when blacking his shoes, had tho conviction that ho had often dono so before, and ho mentions as an explanation tho fact of the brain being a double organ. One sldo of tho brain ro ceives tho impression beforo tho other, and in tho second case there is the memory of tho first impression. IJut to this view It mny bo objected that thero is a conviction iliac tno iormer stato was experienced a long timo before, sometimes, too, with tho belief that it occurred In a remote and oth erwise forgotten ' past. Sometimes, no doubt, thero is nn actual memory of dreams. Tho latter Is most often tho case when some incident during the day recalls a dream of tho previous night that had been forgotten on awakening in tho morn ing. Another explanation founded on the theory of hereditary memory is not impoB piblo. This would include tho case of tho student who blacked his shoes. From a scientific jM)int of view this explanation Is perfectly rational. A memory of things thr.t our ancestors havo dono Is consistent with strict reason ing, nnd wo havo something almost amounting to memory of this kind in tho case of animals. Darwin tells of dogs that wero taken to Central America nnd taught to hunt deer in n particular way, and tho progeny of these dogs, when they were taken out without their parents, hunted at onco according to the particular method without beinc trained. This kind of memory occurs in different tj?:.-r.. A sudden turn or thp road in a stratum country brines us face to faco with a landscapo that seems familiar, Meetini? a person for tho first time, wo feel os if wo had already seen him. Head lm? u book that wo have never seen before, tho thoughts or tho language, or both, seem ns If they had nlrcady been presented to tho mind. Again, a funeral service, a procession or somo pageant, all at onco the wholo sceno seems familiar. Many remarkablo cases of this kind of mcmorv aro told. An inhabitant or isew England, when on a visit to England. went to rco Iho homo of his ancestors. IIo thought ho recognized tho village church and the landscape, but ho believed ho must uavo seen a nlcturo of them before. I low ever, on passlnir through tho churchyard his attention was especially attracted by a tombstono on which tho name inscribed seemed familiar. On inquiry he discovered that tho vouna clrl who was burled there had been engaged to ono of his ancestors, who, according to an account given in n book written on tho family, used often to tuiv visits to tho tomb of his loved ono. TToroiUt.'irv mcmorv is tho only clew J ft this case, if we except a vivid Imnginiv tion. A similar story is told pf a York shlreman who went on a visit to Somerset and thero recognized and remembered weu hunting tho red deer. IIo had never tione so himself before, but his father had hunt rd tho red deer In Somerset for several vears in tho early nart of Ms life. A celebrated artist tells a story of how4 when he was playing with pencil and pa per, he suddenly began to draw a portrait at ft face that ho seemed to remember, liux ha never discovered tho original untu when, on a visit to a country house, ho discovered tho faco among tho portraits of the ancestors of tho family. On inquiry he found that his grandfather had once been engaged to Ihi married to tho girl, but had been obliged to glvo her up on tno pressure rf hft relatives. Dr. Arnold Pick tells of a man who una r.hTonic attacks of pseudo memory. W lieu ever he was present nt a social gathering or visited any placo that was new io nun, thn incident, with all its familiar circum stances, nnneared so familiar tnati ne was convinced of hnving received the samo lm prcsslons t)fore or having been surround ed with tho samo objects under tho same tvmiminns of weather, etc. If ho unucr took any new occupation, ho seemed to through it at some previous fimo nnfl under fiimllar conditions, ims fivllni? sometimes appeared at tho time, sometimes at tho end or a lew nours, anu anmpttmcs not until tho next day, nut ai ways with great distinctness. In this case an explanation may perhaps he found in the man's possession of a very powerful imAtrlnatlon. which, being constantly ex l on a number of possible sltua tlons, led to tho recognition afterward of similarities in actual experience. As an examination in other cases it may thut there is an actual memory of events that occurred in early childhood and re mained for a long time forgotten by the iitT-Mnni Mmself nnd his friends. Car- tMta nt ft clergyman who went with a party of friends to visit a cnstlo that ho did not remember ho had ever seen before. A a lm ormmnrhrd thO CatCWBV llO became t., r,r n. rrrv vivid Impression of linrlnrF srfn it Tirevlously. and ho seemed to himself to seo not only tho gateway It self, but also donkeys beneath the arch and peoplo on tho top of it, nnd it was for .m timo in the belief that ho was tho victim of a delusion or prank of memory, until nn Innut ring of his mother, sho in- frt,i him that when ho was 18 months old she hail gone to tho cnstlo with a largo party and taken him in tne pannier oi .iir nnd that tho elders of tho party, having brought luncheon with them, ote it on the roof of the gateway. Child Study. O;io of the puzzling things to the stu dents of tho new science of pnldology, or child study, is the different methods which vn.n omnlnv in learning to walk. Ono hild will never creep, but rise up sudden ly and toddlo off, another will creep entire and in a sideways direo tion, but he, too, finds tho use of his i legs and feet in good timo, whilo a third hitches along tho floor in a sitting posture for v- ytnra ha stands and starts away. Many more variations of the plain straight- forward creeping nave uwmi rV' ,i Kn Mnorta aro wondering why this should be, as walking is ono of the most -.ttiirft hftbltsof tho human animal. and ought to be reached by ft similar proc ess in all cases. New York Post CAPTURING AN EAGLE. a. Vounj IJJrt! That Win Cuus'il lor IV t la iuutiieru Arltona. In St. Nicholas, Wolcott Lo Cleat Tamo Heard writes of "Mo.-es, a Eagle," ono of his pets while ho was engaged in engineering in southern Arizona. Mr. Heard gives tho follow ing account of its capture : I saw on tho rounded top of ono of tho giant cacti with which theso des erts aro thickly studded an eagle the liko of which, though familiar with tho fowls of that region, I had never beforo 6ecn, and I may hero add that wo never did with any certainty discover tho species to which she belonged. 1 rode near to get a better viow, but 6he de sired no closer acquaintance, for, after unfolding her winps onco or twice in a hesitating sort of manner as I ap proached, she finally spread them and flew heavily away, a couple of pistol shots from tho wagon having only tho effect of increasing her speed. Tho cac tus on which sho had been resting was a very fair sample of tho largest variety in tho world of that interesting plant. Of tho thickness of a man's body, it rose straight from tho ground, a bcauti fur fluted column of vivid apple green, to a height of 25 feet, where a cluster of branches nearly ns thick as tho parent stem grew out from it and turned up ward, whilo tho main trunk, without a bend, rose several feet higher. Between two of theso branches and tho trunk thero was built a nest of good sized sticks, about twice as largo as a bushel basket, and on this my eyes hap pened to bo resting when the noiso cf tho shots brought above its edge a little head covered with grayish yellow fuz., out of which peered two big round eyts with nn air of anxious inquiry. In that desert eouutry, far from rail ways and towns, wo led rawicr oun lives, so the several pets wo possessed in tho big permanent camp miles awny served in no small measure to amuso us, and to theso we wished to add our vouna friend of the cactus. But how to get him down was a problem Somebody suggested that a volunteer climb the cactus, but no one thrust himself forward to do so. Tho Spanish name by which it is known ia sajmrro, which, put into Kuclish. means "thr.t which scratches," and us the spun which thickly rover the cuter cd?c.? t.-f the riues are from one n four inchts long a:.d as sharp ii needles it will I seen tl at the n-;me gives a good idea cf tho p!.i:it. Wo uid no; liko to cut it down, for fear I ho fall mir.ht injure tho flcdgliiu?, tut after some debate no better men. od presented it.-elf, so tho two axmen cct to work. As the first Mows mado the green shaft tremble, tho head appeared onco more, trying, with an expression of concern, to seo what was coins on below, but thi3 the thick bides of the nest prevented. Then it looked at mo and said. "Jark " Thi3 was tho first remark Moses ever mado to us and there was no time for moro then, for the nxes had eaten through the pulpy mass, which now began to bend to its fall. As tho nest tilted wo could seo the thick body belonging to tho head, with two big claws clutching wildly, while tho weak, featherless wings flapped madly in an instiuctivo effort to support their owner. Tho cactus came down with a crash, and, running up, we looked for our bird, but only a littlo gray down was visible with one leg helplessly extended from under a big branch which, broken by tho shock, had fallen across and almost hid him. We feared ho was killed, but when by means of an axhead hooked around tho prickly stuff it was pulled asido he gathered himself together, quito unhurt, and then, surveying tho strange beings who surrounded him, mado up his mind to them with that philosophy wo later learned to be one of his traits, and opening his great month to its fullest extent hinted that ho was hungry and wanted something to eat. Fool Killing-. The condition of mind which is fa vorablo to mysticism, superstition and reverie is unfavorable to life, and the continuance of such conditions leads to death. On the billboard across tho street I saw iust now the advertisement of a lecture on the "ethical value of living in two worlds at once. " Whoever thus lives in two worlds is certain soon to prove inadequate for either. II ail men sougnc neaiing irum mo - . . . I 1 . a xl messed handkerchief of the lunatio or from contact with old bones or old clothes: if all physicians used "revealed remedies" or tho remedies nature finds for such disease; if all business wero conducted by faith; if all supposed "natural richts" of man were mado tho basis of legislation; if all tho pro tean phases of that which Zangwill has cleverly called the "higher foolishness wero worked out in action, the insecu rity of theso beliefs would speedily ap pear. Not only civilization but civilized man himself would vanish from the earth. The safo shelter of the cave and hollow treo would be tho cradlo of tho new man and the new woman. The lomr and bloody road of progress through fool killing would for centuries bo traversed again. The fool lives in so ciety only by sufferance of tho sane; tho weak, bv tho altruism of tho strong. That is strong which endures. Might- does not make right, but that which is right will justify itself by becoming might What we call social virtues are tho elements of raco stability. Davia fitnrr Jordan In Popular beience Monthly. Fall rrlco. Mrs. Skrimper Ono can never be lieve one-half that is said in advertise ments. Biasfold Tatlng had an ad vertisement in yesterday's paper saying that everything was marked down. Mrs. Bareainhunter x os, I saw it. Mrs. Skrimper Well, it was fulse. I bought two postage stamps there this morniug and I had to pay as much as ever for them. Boston Transcript A MORMON LESSON. AN INDUSTRIAL SYSTEM THAT WAS FOUNDED BY A GENIUS. Erlsuam Young CIiomj For the Corner- tone oi St.ito the Sonurt Principle of Industrialism-What He Dl.l With tho Problem of Irrlgalioa. On July 14, 1817, Pic-idt ::t Willis and his follow pioneers r..tc! t!:ren' !i the picturesque cutlet of Immigration canyon into tho alley of tho Ureat fc-ult lake. Utah was then Mexican fo:1, and the leader believed he could found what ever character of institution bhould suit him and his peoplo. In tho bitter anti- Mormon crusades of tho pact i: has been alleged that " Brigham Young had chains on men's souls. " There is no doubt that religious superstition, rendered effective by the marvelous machinery of tho church, was partly the source of the leader's irresistible power with his own peoplo, but back of tho religious super stition and the church organization stood tho brain of a great and masterful man. IIo knew that his power, to be enduring, must rest upon something material nnd tangible, and this some-' thing he discerned to bo tho prosperity of tho people themselves. Brigham Young was an organizer of prosperity. This was tho real source of his strength. IIo did not aim at mere temporary prosperity. On tho contrary, ho fought everything that tended to that end, going to tho length of actually for bidding tho opening of tho rich mines in the mountains near at hand, because ho abhorred tho spirit of speculation. IIo choso for tho cornerstone of his stato tho principle of industrialism, and that prin ciple lies thero yet, at tho base of a no- blo edifice of economic fact, reared by human toil and held firmly in placo by tho average prosperity of all who had part in its building. If tho great archi tect and tho superintendents and fore man who surrounded him enjoyed a larger sharo of tho profits than tho work men, it is also truo mat tne nuniDiesc hewer of stono and carrier of mortar was paid in proportion to the importance of his labors. And what fair mind can ob ject to an industrial system that yields theso results? So far as can bo learned, Brigham Young had no previous knowledge of ir rigatiou when he entered Salt Lako val ley. IIo quickly realized that ho had como to an arid country, which would bo hopeless for agriculture unless arti ficially watered. With marvelous perccp tion, he saw that irrigation was not a drawback, but an advantage of tho most important sort IIo realized that it meant freedom alike from the dangers of tho drought and of tho flood. He discov ered that, having a rich soil and amplo 6unshiuo, and adding moisture by the construction of ditches, it was actually an improvement upon naturo to be ablo to turn tho "ram either on or off with equal facility. And therefore he rightly concluded that ho had found in these conditions tho basis of tho most certain worldly prosperity and tho most scicn tifio agriculture. It remained for a later genius to re mark : Irrigation is not a substitute for rain. Rain is a substitute for irrigation, and-a inichtv poor ono." But if the Mormon leader did not say so he evi dently felt it. IIo perceived, further moro. that irrigation was much more than nn insurance policy upon tho crops It brought all tho processes cf agricul ture within the realm of known facts, and that is science It even rendered possible the control of tho sizo of vesetables. and this be- camo important many years afterward, when the Mormon people added a great sugar factory to their industrial system, for it is. important to grow sugar beets of about a standard sizo to get the best results. Moisture is required togivo the beet a vigorous growth at tho beginning, but when it is well started weeks of un interrupted sunshine aro desirable in order to develop the saccharine qualities. Much sunshine at tho wrong t:mo dries up tho crop, whilo much moisturo at the wrong timo produces a beet pleasing to look upon, but nuproLtr.ble at tho fac tory. Brigham Young also realized, almost at tho first, that the necessity of careful irrigation largely increased the labor tipon an acre of land, but he found that this labor was generously rewarded by the increased yield both in quantity and quality. And from this fact ho drew the most important principle of his commonwealth, which was tho division of land into small holdings. Closely re lated to this is the other twin factor in Mormon prosperity the diversification of farm products, to the last degree. Natural conditions, even where there is tho most abundant and well distribut ed rainfall, aro often favorable to tho production of only n few crops. But the Mormons realized that tho skillful ap plication of water just whero and when needed, and in just tho right quantity, and by tho very best method, rendered possible the widest variety of fruits, vegetables aud cereals suited to the tem perate zone. Thus Brigham Young taught the peoplo that no man should own moro land than he could cultivate to its highest point by his own and his family's labor, and that no man should go to a 6tore for any article of food or clothing that could bo profitably pro duced on his own small farm. "Tho Conquest of Arid America," by William E. Smythe, in Century. Toughened. "Sav." said tho depntr, "I put No. 711 ou the treadmill eight hours apo ns a punishment, and I'll be dinged ir he ain't goiu on jist as chipper and happy as can bo. "Why, of course," wild the prison warden in tones of disgust "Didn t yon know the feller was sent here for bicycle stealing? That sort of thing is right in his lina "Indianapolis JournaL A substitute shines lightly as a king until a kina be bv. and then his state empties itelf, as doth an inland brook Into the main of waters. bhaicespeam McGLYNN BROS.. C01ITBACT0RS & BUILDERS Of all kinds of biifk and stone rk. Prlct co appUcat ou. HANCOCK MICH. Howlarid & Co., IForraerly with l'reeoott &. Co. tfA.M4I.ltS AM UltOKKim. 33 Ames Building, BOSTON , - MASS, Interest allowed on deposits. Orders executed for Cash or Margin in Stocks, Bonds, Grain and Provisions listed on the Uoston, New York and Chicago Exchanges. Special Attention Gra to Couuer Stocks. perSend for Circular and Telegrafu Code FOR SAJLiEJ! THE MICHIGAN HOUSE, Corner of Oak and Sixth Streets, lied Jacket. Lot 23 and 24. block 13. Calumet, known as the George's property on Lake Linden road. Lets 1 and 2, block 0, Tamarack City. Also improved and unimproved Farm Lands (or sale and to lease. A large lot of Timbered Lands. In this and adjoining county, fcr sale. Abstracts of Title furnished. Taxes paid or non-residents. COHKF.MPOMIKXCK BO LICIT Kl. J. JL. SXIKUXAXs Jtoom 3, NtrobclIIld...lIoDgliton..lek Passenpr Trains on II R, R. L In effect December 29, 1895. t t a m p m p m lv Ar p m p m am 7.46 12.15 6.00. ...Red Jacket 8.30 2.40 10.10 7.51 12.21 5 06 Laurlum 8.24 2.ii4 10.04 7.57 12.27 5.12 Osceola 8.18 2.23 0.18 6.36 1.05 5.50 Hancock 7.40 1.50 0.20 8.40 1.10 5.55 Houghton 7.30 1.40 0.01 a m p m p m Ar Lv p m p m a m Daily, t Daily except Sunday. Passenpr Trains on H. & T. L. R. In effect December 29, 1805. am p m p m lv Ar p m p m am i 12.15 5.00.. ..Lake Linden. .45 r-i .tt.ZU V.Dt 7.47 12.17 5.02 Llnwood 8.18 2.28 0.51 7.50 12.20 5.05 S L. L,inacn o.io z.so .ou 7.55 12.25 6.10 Mills 8.10 2.20 0.41 8.04 12.34 6.19 Woodside 8.01 2.11 t.8 8.07 12.37 6.23 Dollar way 7.wi z.u w.o 8.25 12.55 6.40 Hancock 7.40 1.60 O.lf 8.40 1.10 6.55 Houghton.-. ...7.30 1.40 0.0 ampmpmAr Lv p m p m a m Daily, t Dally except Sunday. o.,s.s. &A.R.R. iff: Time TeJole: In effect January 31, 187. TRAINS LEAVE HOUGHTON For Detroit and the east daily, and Ewen and mtermeaiaie BiauoiiB. dallv except Sunday 0:00 a.m Per Chicago and Margnett Z:2 p. m TRAINS ARRIVE HODOHTCB Fi ob Marquette Chloago and Ewen 2!S p' ' From Detroit aud the ea lZl p. m. Dally, tyaily except eunaay. For tickets, time tables and other informs I on apply to J. u. i unu, j-icnei h BUM! J KUJLCIl U11UU. m t. Panl Railroad. LAKE SUPERIOR DIUMOll Chicago o v sM4wi " fc CHICAGO r r III, ' j SOLID TRAINS FAST TlfJEI PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CAM. AH coupon atenta on the northern Pani Via tell tickets rto the laivaukej forU am U. &. V, B. TTLI Ooirmarlclal Act. Capabllo Utokj i nvrtlinv II II IT AFFORD. General l'assenter Act., Chicago.