Newspaper Page Text
TbeCopperContntaiiijllew PUBLISHED BY F'rod Maolcoxizie, Editor an Proprietor. BMrnffloaintheNtws blook. north end of fifth street, lied Jacket, Michigan. TKUMt OP 8lIISCKlPTIONz BY MAIL OH CAKKltB. On year dn advance) - M 00 tlx month W Per month 60 irtlRKD AT TUB POST OmCB AT CALCM IT, MICH IQ AM AS BECOND-CCAS9 MATTER. J3P"Oommunlcatlon8 and letters of business donneoted with ibe payor should be addressed to The Cooper Country Evening News, Caluniel. Mieulsan. Leland, Towle & Co., llankertt and llroker. Members of the Boston ana New Tort Eichanses. Copper Stocks a Specialty. W. F. Fitzgerald. 6tt Coujcreaa St., Boston Mining Property For Sale. All tbe property, real and personal, of the Lac La Belle Mining: Company, Nltuated In Keweenaw Co. 3IIrh, Embracing 3,fi.ri5 acres on the mineral range, 18 7!W acres in fee-l.UsS acres surface only mak ng20,75ti acre- south of mineral range with the hardwood still staudinsr, together with seven miles of railroad to stamp mill at Lac la Belle; with outlet thence to Lake Superior. Plant at the mine and Lake all in good order and ready for operation. Enquire for further partio oars from W. K. VIVIAN. Supt. Delaware Mine P. U. Keweenaw Co. Mich. MINING. Stock. "Boston Mass. November 12, 18l7. Mlouei Arnold 3 Atlantic ?i 50 Boston & Montana i:u Untie Sc Boston 21 Oalumetand llecla 4,V Centennial 1(1 50 Oopper Falls rranklin 1 Kearsarice 1? M r.oneer tt Usoeola 34 25 Qulnoy 113 Old Dominion 21 25 Tamarack 1-2 Camaack Junior Teomuseh Wolverine 1" Heroed Oold 4 75 The Cook's Mistake. 'A Prairio avenue capitalist, who pained tho larger part of his wealth in the saw mill and lumbering industry in northern Wisconsin, is noted for the vigilance with which lie wafc'hos tho siJ details of Lis, big business. As an example of this char epoction made by him to his logging camps in the pine woods. On this trip the Cliioago lumborman was grieved to not leu that some of his toamsters used too many oats in feeding their hornes, and was shocked by a few wu&Ji-x im linn ji iijf mill what pained him most was the amount of provisions consumed at mo eamn. no ne- iieved tliat tills was due to the wasteful nessof the cooks, though sueli waste is difficult to detect. Uut tlm Chicago man soon lilt upon an ingenious detective scheme by which he was able to tell wheth er or not the cooks were economical in tbe use of supplies. At all the ramps a pig was kept and fed on the scraps from the woodsmen's ta bles. After a visit to tho pigpen he ap proached tho cook with a friendly smile aim j eiiiiii kt j . "Ah, Antoine, that's a fine, fat pig you have there. Couldn't you just as well feed another?" As Antoine was wise be replied: "No. We can't keep moro than one. We haven't enough scraps." At the next camp the eame question was asked tho unsuspecting Peter, and be promptly replied: "Why, yes 1 Wo could feed another pig just as well as not. Send us one." Then tho lumberman found the camp foreman and said: "O'Brien, jou will huvo to discharge that cook of yours. He can feed too many pigs." Chicago Chron--cle. No Unnecessary Chances. Senator Kyle's secretary is a canny Scot, '.Mac Far land by name, who has a dry sense of humor. Itocontly ho Injured Ids thumb, and the matter beeaino so serious that bo went to a surgeon. JIo was told that bo would nave, in iiikkto mi operation. Mae Purland consented to stand tho op eration, lie v.ris ready to have it per formed then and there. The physician asked him if be wilicd to take chloroform or ether. 'Will it make mo Jose my senses)1" risked tbe Scotch nn. "I should say so." t riid tho dctor. MaeFarland deliberately thrust bis hand into bis pot-Let - and Is yau to count bis change. "There's no l.urry nhout Iho money." said the lo tor. "You can count it out to me niter the rptration Is per- tormeu. ' "Jiut you wild It would make inu lose my senses to take chloroform or ether, didn't you!" ashed Ma, Fa,- , i,d. "Certainly," sunl the d- tor. 'It will - make you unconscious." 'Then excuse me," said Mael'Y.rhmd. win. iniiMi-. in i.niiir i (mii.i my money now! ' Washlngi'in Post. A Cnnttnus Kentut-klftn. 'No, sir," said the Kentucky g"nt!e- man, "1 will not go out In this rain un less I can llnd an umbrella, sir." "You aro very careful of yourself for so -robust a i nan." "Yes, tdr. I have bad n fact brought to ' my attention which makes mo far more - cautious In sucli a matter than I used to 1m. I have just learned that the human hodv is ranableof absorbing water through the poras, and I don't caro to tako any more chance than tho ordinary occasions -of ablution, sir, make necessary, air." ARE YOU SUPERSTITIOUS? Look For Your Natal Month ut See Vourelf mm Others so Yu. An English authority U mnpouslble for tho assert lou that a man's uottuy dependa upon the month of hi birth. A man boru In January will bo a bard worker, a lover of good ivino, a lino singer, a manager of great enterprises. A woman born in that month will bo ulTublo, will hava domestic tastes and will bo capable of great endur ance. A man born in February will love mon ey much, but women mora. Ha will be stingy nt home, but prodigal abroad. The woman will bo an ailcctiuuato wife and a good mother. The man born In March will be hand some, honest and prudent. Yut he will die poor. The woman will bo tall and stut and witty. The man born in April will not neces sarily be a fool even if his birthday Is tbe next day after March SI. The woman will be a chatterbox and will have advanced Ideas. She will bo a leading member of the shrieking sisterhood. The man born in May will be amiable and will make bis life partner happy. Tbe woman will equal him in amiability and the other above named desirable quality. The man born in Juno will be of small stature and very fond of women and chil dren. The woman will be illgbty and a high liver, but will repent and sober down at 40. The man born in July will bo of mili tary tastes, a trifle pompous, but a good fellow withal. The woman will have a sulky temper; she will bo proud and hand some. The man born in August will bo ambi tious and courageous. Tho woman will bo what Americana call capable. She will be equal to running a farm or editing a news paper. The man born in September will be strong and wise; bo will make few mis takes and live and die rich. Tho woman will be loved by her friends, have many suitors and die an old maid. The man born in October, will write poetry when young; then he will dabble in politics and wind up as a reformer. Tbe woman wiil be pretty and late in lifo an apostlo of total abstinence. Tho man born in November will have a fine face, great address, and if not careful be will bo a gay Lothario. Tho woman will be largo, liberal minded and fond of novelty and novels. The man born in December will have a passionate temper, yet will bo tho first to forgive. The woman will bo a Lady Houu tlful to the deserving poor, but a terror to tramps and willfully unemployed. Phil adelphia Press. ELECTRIC SHOCK VICTIMS. Best Formula For Treating; Persons Struck by ttie Llectrlo Current. One of the contingencies of modern civ ilization which is almost entirely new and is wholly dependent upon the development of modern industry is the treatment of ac cidents from electric shock Tho matter, says The Medical Record, bas been dis cussed quite thoroughly by physicians in this country, but it bas been worked out perhaps more systematically by Dr. d'Ar- sonvul of i'aris, who has recently made a report to tho Academie do Medicine of Purls upon the method of treating persons injured by electrical shocks. D' Arson val states that electricity causes death some times directly by the disruptive and elec trolytic effects of the charge on the tissues. This death is final. It sometimes, howev er, causes death indirectly by arrest of res piration and syncope, caused by stimula tion of the nerve centers. Under these cir cumstances a person may bo revived if projier measures are applied. , The formula for reviving tbe victim of electric shock is this: The person so dis abled should be treated like ono drowned; in other words, ho should be laid upon tho back, and artificial respiration performed in the way thut is ordinarily described. Some further practical advice, however, is given to those who are called at once to the scene of tho accident and at tho time when the person is perhaps still in contact with tho wires. Of oourso tbe first thing to be done is to stop the current or break the contact. In doing the latter ono should not touch the victim on the faco or hands or uny naked part of the body. It is better to lift him by tho coattails or to throw a blanket over him and pull him by this. Nothing that is wet should be thrown up on him, and if his clothes are wet the hands should not be put in contact with them. A piece of dry wood can be placed under tho body, and ho can then bo lifted. The further treatment of the case is the familiar one applied in attempting to re store the drowned. Iho arms aro worked, and tbe tongue is kept drawn out; the body may sometimes bo rubbed thorough ly with a cloth or brush in order to in crease the circulation of the blood. Oxygen and perhaps a stimulant may be employed. New York World. An Autocrat. The autocrat of tho police force is the officer on a Broadway crossing. Up goes bis right band, and every vehicle for half a block either way comes to a sudden 6top while tiio crowd of a dozen or 20 pedestri ans hurry across. If a cab driver is new at the business, he'll try to sneak up ou the officer or pass along the curbstone. Then thoro is a signal which you may fall to catch a second officer appears from some where away goes cab and driver, and If Jehu gets out of it for a $10 bill he's a lucky man. The Broadway policeman is king of the road. Ho says stop, and every whoel ceases to turn; ho says go ahead, and tbe rush is on again. He seldom smiles and never jokes. The greatest mil lionaire in New York would bo bustled out of the way or run over. The governor of this great state would be guyed by tbe cab drivers and yelled at by the grlpmen. Hut the six foot policeman of the Broad way squad well, don't try any tricks on Mini New York Letter in Detroit Free Press. . Worse and Worse. Wife (counting over her change after making a purchase) I think he has given mo the wrong change. Husband (savagely) I thought so. I thought so! That's tho way my hard earn ed money goesl Trust a woman to get swindled. Co back to the counter and get it set right at once. Wife returns to the counter, and hands tho assistant 10s. Husband Why, what have you been doing? Wife Making the change right. He gave me half a sovereign too much. Husband (moro savagely than ever) Well, you uro an Idiot I London Globe. lAtttj Honor. ' "Yes, sir; I've lu Id one of the highest positions in tho gift of the government." Tou don't nay. What was Itf" "I. ran tho elevator in the Washington monument." Washington Post. , ELECTRICITY IN AVAR EDISON TALKS OF ITS DEATH DEAL ING POSSIBILITIES. Watr llighly Charged May B Used to Rapalsa Assaults A Torpedo CabU That Woald Protect New York Against Any and All Navies A Dog Quickly Killed. Somewhere Edison read onco that some firemen at work on a building where there were a lot of electric wires overhead were rather severely shocked. Tbe6tream from one of the lines of hose hit one of the wires. The htvavy current leakod from the wires and ran down the stream, shock ing the nozzle men. "I hadn't thought of that before," Edi son said to the Sun man, "so I tried it with an induction coil and a cat. It worked all right. That was tho last of tho cat." When Edison began to think about ap pliances useful in war, he thought of that stream of water. - The difficulty of throw ing a stream of water any considerable distance precludes the possibility of its use as a means of attack, but for defensive purposes, Edison says, it is ' absolute against certain forms of attack. He bas devised a fluid which, because of its greater viscosity, can be propelled in a solid stream through a nozzle a much greater distance than water. "Suppose you were defending an en trenchment, breastworks any sort of fortifications against a charge. You take a lot of little nozzles, throwing streams less than half an inch in diameter. I can throw such a stream with a fluid of my own preparation at least 600 feet. I wouldn't stand in front of it nt 1,000 foot. You can charge that fluid with 5,000 volts, and it will kill on the instant of contact. A one horsepower engine will furnish all tho power needed. It takes power to produco amperage, but it's volt age that kills, and that is easily produced. The boiler and dynamo could bo lugged around In a one horse wagon. All you need besides is a powerful pump. Tuke half a dozen nozzles, arranged on swivels, and tho attacking forco couldn't get near your fortifications. It would bo perfectly uasy to place tho dynamo and machinery underground, where artillery couldn't possibly Injure them. ' Why, thut thing Is absolute." "Y'ou apparently have no doubt what ever about the killing properties of elec tricity, " said Tho Sun man. "Kill? Why, I killed a dog out here in one ten-thousandth part of a second." "How did you measure the tinier" EdisOu laughed. Then, with a jerk of bis thumb toward the ceiling ho said: "Rigged a weight up thero. Wo know how fast a weight falls by the simplo at traction of gravity. Wo put a brass scalo beside the weight. The turning on of tho current that killed the dog released the weight and it began to fall. Shutting off the current arrested the weight again. The current was turned on and oil as quickly as possible. The dog was dead and the weight had fallen two one-hundredtbs of an inch. It took it one ten-thousandth of a second to do that. That's the time it took to kill the dog." . Then Mr. Edison talked about tbe pro tection of harbors by torpedoes. It would be very simple, be said, to construct tor pedo defenses for New York, or any other harbor, for that matter. It can bo done quickly and at little cost. Accurate and careful surveys of all the important har bors on tho Atlantic and Pacific seaboards are in the possession of the government engineers. They know the depth of water, the location of bars and tho character of the bottom. Taking New York harbor as an illustration, he said: "Suppose you stretch an endless cable from Rockaway over toward Long Branch. Put it farther out if that doesn't keep the enemy's ships far enough away. Make it from Fire Island to Spring Lake if neces sary. Sink this cable to tho bottom and work it around wheels just as the brldgo cable is worked, so that it can be moved forward and back. Insulate It so that It can be charged with electricity. Then at tach torpedoes to it every 200 foot or so, as near together as is necessary to make the thing sure and effective. These torpedoes will stand on end in tho water and can be built so that they will rise to the surface as soon as they are freed from tho cable. The pressure of tho water on the diaphragm keeps tho circuit broken. When tho tor pedo is released from the cable it rises to the surface. As it rises tho pressure on the diaphragm decreases. If the torpedo rises under a ship, tho forco of the impact sots it off and blows the ship out of water. But if it misses the ship it goos off when it reaches the surface, because, tho pressure on the diaphragm being removed, tho cir cuit would be completed just as if by im puct. "Now, by having a long string of theso torpedoes on a movablo cable, it would be possible to hit any ship that tried to got in. The operator of the cable, at his in land observatory, watches the ships cal culate their position with his range finder. He knows where his torpedoes are, and at tbe proper time ho pushes tho button and frees two or threo of them. The result is the destruction of the ship. If It should be thought possible for a ship to get by one such cable it would bo easy enough to have more than ono. Tho coast would bo lined with them, and the protection of the city would bo absolute Torpedocatch ers would not be effective against such a defense, because if they began grappling for tho cable the first touch of their grap pling Irons would notify the operator. All he would have to do would be to freo a couple of torpedoes. That would be tho end of the torpedo catcher. It wouldn't bo necessary to hit him with ono of them. They would bo sure to explode somewhere near him, and ho couldn't stand the con cussion." New York Sun. A Cnte Negro, A good story is told of an old negro who lives out on the Vlnoville branch. The line that marks the city limits is only a few yards beyond iho branch, and the two room houso occupied by the negro is built across the lino, ono room being insido the city and the other outside. For teu months in the year tho old negro lives in the room outsldo tho city, but at the expiration of that tlmo moves over into the other room. By that means ho can truthfully tell tho registrars that ho has been a resident for just 60 days, and is thcreforo entitled to register and voto in the city elections without paying taxes. According to tho story, he has kept this up for years and makes no secret of it. Macou (Go.) Tolo graph. , The Mendicity society of London has in Its museum in Fisher street, near Red Lion square, a curious collection of the varied dodges resorted to by tbe begging frater nity of that vast city to excite sympathy. And extract coin from tho pockets of the charitably disposed. CALUMET ftLMNKAtt 1VOCAIA. Two good horses (or sale. Enquire at Joseph Wertin & Son's store. Do not miss oar sped! couch sale. 8. Olson. Fine Cider For Bale. Just received, a new lot of fine cidr at James Lisa's. For Sale A desirable house and lot in block 21, Pewabic street, Laurium. Terms, etc., c ill on J. It. Murphy, k To Kent Four rooms untarnished oyer tbe Grand Union Tea store. Apply to Mrs. Wilkins, oyer Carlton's hardware store. For Sale A lotol household goods consisting of furniture, carpets, parlor and kitchen stoves, etc. Apply at 213 Eighth street. Bis bargains in stockings, 17 cents per pair, all wool. Gentlemen's white handkerchiefs, one-balf dozen 17 cents at M. Gutter's. Two bouses and lots for sale at a bar gain on the boundry line between Flor ida and Laurium. Four vacant lots in Bollman's addition. TV. II. Fauceet. ' Small pill, safe pill, best pill. De Witt's Little Early Risers cure billiousnes, con stipation, sick' headache. Soderqre.n & Sodergren. In parlor, dining room or bed room furniture we have a large new assort ment in brass, iron and popular woods to suit your tast and pocket. E. Ryan. You can't afford to risk your life by alj lowing a cold to develop into pneumonia or consumptfon. Instant relief and a certain cure are afforded by One Minute Cough Cure. Sodergben& Sodergren. Grease spots, pitch, tar, paint, etc., can positively be removed without the slightest injury by our new French pro cess ot clothes cleaning. Michigan Dyk Works. Oyer 312 Fifth Street. Imported chinaware is not a side line with us, this is one of our main lines and while we handle it in large quantities we are able to give you bigger values tuan any other store in this county. The Saving Bank. Cows For Hale I have just received a carloads of fresh milch cows, some Jerseys, which will be sold at moderate prices. Milk and cream for sale. George Demarois, Portland street. Red Jacket. Disfigurement for life by burns or scalds may be avoided by using De Witt's Witch Hazel Sal ye. the great remedy for piles and for all kinds oi sores and skin troubles. SODERGREN & SODERGREN. rail and Winter Styles. Having received a fine stock ot clothe. suitable for fall and winter suitings, and overcoats I invite an inspection. Suits made to order, fit guaranteed and tbe prices very low. Give me a call. M. Johnson, Over Sauer's Sample Room. "The worst cold I ever had in my life was cured by Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy," writes W. H. Norton, of Sutter Creek, Cal. "This cold Jleft e with a cough and I was expectoratingalI the time. .The remedy cured me, and I want all my friends when troubled with a cough or cold to use it, for it will'do them good." Sold by Sodergren & Soder gren, druggists. Free of Cliargo to MufTerer). Cut this out and take it to your drug gist and get a sample bottle of King New Discovery, for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, They do not ask to buy before trying. This will show you the great merits of this truly wonderful rem edy, and show you what can be accom plished by the regular size bottle. This is no experiment, and would be disas trous to tbe proprietor, did they not know it would invariably cure. Many of the best physician are now using it in most severe caspm. It is guaranteed. Trial bottle free at D, T. MncDonald's drug stsre. Regular size GO and $1. The llrltlnh Medical Institute. It affords us much pleasure to an-nounce-that the British Medical Institute has become a permanent fixture in Calu met and that Dr. Ira C.Williams, who has made so many friends in this vicinity, has been promoted to the position of chief consulting physician. Dr. Williams has hadtwenty-fouryears of experience in the practice of medicine, is a graduate of Long Island Hospital, of Brooklyn, New York, clans of 1873, is an honest. conscientious, and skillful phy sician, nis specialty is the treatment of all chronic, nervous, and special diseases of both sexes, especially all catarrh affec tions of the noHe, throat and lungs, dis eases of women, and the upeclal diseases of men. From now until further notice, the doctor will give the deserving poor free treatment ever week day morning 0 to 10 o'clock, at his office in the Agnitz block, 430 Fifth street, and to those able to pay his charges are exceedingly rea sonable. He can be consulted from D a. m. till 8 p. m. on week days, and Irom 10 to 2 on Snndajs. No better opportunity has ever been afforded tbe citizens of this country to avail themselves of the ser vices of ao honest and skllllful physician. IlANIiS, STATE . SAVINGS . BANK. LAIKIIM, - - MICH. CAPITAL - - -I- - - - $50,000 SUPERIOR SAYINGS HANCOCK. . . CAPITAL AND Mien, t7(l COIHIKRCIAL AND MAVIM At'COUIVTN IIECKIVF.D IX nVXH OF OXG IIOLLAll Ai, J DTRFPTnnsi P JOHNSON VIVIAN, E. L. WRIGHT, M JACOB BAER, C. A. WRIGH OFFICERS 0. A. W RIGHT, l'res t and Manager. JACOB lHrn I M.L.EFFINGER, M. C. GETCHPr... hU,;iceW Cannier State Savings Bank. Cashier Superior Raying, na k ai:iltm lUnau Dille 47 T Tina no en u :il in diseases of the aV J Kidneys aLd Urinary organs. Have A you neglected your Kidneys? Have T vou overworked your nervous sy s- m Stem and caused trouble with yourV Kidneys and Bladder? Have you W pains in the loins, Bide, back, groins f and bladder? Have you a flabby ap pearanco of the face, especially t under the eyes ? Too frequent de- A sire pass urine ? William's Kidney T Pills will Imnsirt new llfrt t.n the dis- I sf eased organs, tone up the system. A and make a new man oi you. JJy mail 50 cents per box. i S Williams Mfg. Co., Props., Cleveland. O. For sale by D, T. Macdonald, druggist, Red Jacket. Warning: Persons who suffer from coughs and colds should heed the warn ings of danger and save themselves suf fering and fatal results by using One Minute Cough Cure. It is an infallible remedy for coughs, colds, croup and all throat and lung troubles. Sodergren & Sodergren. Portraiture. For while the wines of fancy still are free, And 1 can view this mimlo show of thee. Time oas but half succeeded In bis theft. Thyself removed, thy power to soothe me leri. cowfer. You see how important it is that your friends possess a "mimic show" of thy self, as the poet calls a really good por trait. You can obtain a perfect likeness and a most artistic picture at Herman's studio. JHucklen'a Arnica Halve. The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Scores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, ChU biaios, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posiiyely cures Piles, or no pay re auired. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by D. T. MacDonald. J. C. Berry, one of the best known citi zens of Spencer, Mo., testifies that he cured himself of the worst kind of piles by using a few boxes of DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. He bad been troubled with piles for oyer thirty years and had used many different kinds of so-called cures; but DeWitt's was the only one that did the work, and he will verify this state ment if any one wishes to write him. Sodergren & Sodergren. Handsome JCugs. Everybody knows how cheerful it makes a room look to have one or more handsome rugs on the floor, whether the floor be covered with carpets or matting, or is painted. A pretty rug need not necessarily be expensive. S. Olson, the furniture man, has fifty or more designs in rugs, at prices ranging from f 1 to 20 or more. i .I How to Cure Bilious Colic. I suffered for weeks with colic and pains in my stomach caused by biliousness and had to take medicine all the while until I used Chamberlain's Colic. Colera and Diarrhoea Remedy which cored me. I have since recommended it to a good many people. Mrs. F.Butler, Fairhaven. Conn. Persons who are subject to bilious colic can ward off the attack by taking this remedy as soon as the first sym ptoms appear, Sold by Sodergren & Sodergren, druggists. THIS SPACB IS) KESBttVED BY Til Calumet and Heela Mining Company. ITS aVInlPLOYKKlS Wanted to Hent-A house of four rooms Apply to Peter Kelly, Laurium. rwms. ian,'d r Fo?.r boarders, company em llrl'nt1. t0 1owUn. lWt Wnd?y Wanted Two lioarders. company enmlov- nrL"'"1""?11'?9 ,arK rooms with cellar privilege. Apply hj Calumet avenue. For Male Ten-room house, No. 1020 Laur lum at. Apply 612 Fourth street, IllueJaoaet. For nonse No. 687 Cedar strent GaspeAchf1, ApP,Tn th t! mK! on ptSrL town'A1 VoAn8$h XXS&Sr aVRFS John B. Wertin or at the oomDanV'a oEFom. 10 . BIHoum Ho. 11X0 Tunnel lirMt wedetown. Apply on th prmulu. Merchants' &MJ Bank. CALUMRT, Hit. $100, CAPITAL - - 8urplua and undivided profits, q) T11KKK FEB CJKWT FEB arJ PAID ON IIMTiu" .-usl9l II EPQC ornciasi CHARLES BBIOQ8 p, i- vs; First National Bat1 CAxmnuT, ha, capita, . . . na, Surplus, . . . 50, Thn I'm f.mn B- . - svu m VI augg rlU Havings Deposits. Deposits of r1 no upwards Keeelvto. ornciBs: EDWARD RYAN JOHN 8. DYMOCK ViCl-P WILLIAM B. ANDERSON First National Ban! HANCOCK. - Hlea. Capital $: Surplus and nndlriilea profits - 6IJ Three Per Cent Per Asanas Alltt on interoai usposits, omouii WILLIAM HAKBTmm I PETER BUPPB VIOP WILLIAM CONDON a m ma m.m.iim.9iitu nivsiavui. 21H Sixth Street, Calumet First-class in everv respect. Notlilu the best for Calumet pooole and strut that la what we keep. Meals at all boumtv thins: you want; prloes reasonable. 8pr ties: Lobsters, quails, chickens, snipes,! legs. Meals furnished at private raids ana omoes at any time. fid-Istle Best Any to f if 1 YOUR EYES! P. Scholer, We do no other but blsh-f work and you are sure to pil best if you have your glasses I tea oy us. Ref. The oldest established optician In the copper country. rw"With Joseph Hermann, Ca'umet, Wednesday. W F. WILLIAM Piano Aud Organ Toner Asl Itepalrer. Also TONE REGULATOR Has had Ion factory experll" nalrinir and tuning and 18 SDI6 W do flrst-class work. Satisfaction Guarantee Orders left at Bodererens int M or with Harry Kin wm w v'- ly attenaea w. 3D. 3D. S, Dental Offic Over Star Clothing: Stori orrici HOOBi- toils."1' ,,0, ndTtoisveninri -1 Arvonen&Tenhunc The Only ) Gold And Silversmw, In the Upper gSSR and store No. 4. J rna ,in Wa are prepared toecuM All Kinds Of W .... itn In gold and "Tainted M gems, etc., set mouu ryAll kinds of repalrln don. wJU nejsand dispatch, n.n" Kindly oall nd give ui a tiw.