OCR Interpretation


Alma record. (Alma, Mich.) 1878-1928, December 22, 1899, Image 8

Image and text provided by Central Michigan University, Clark Historical Library

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85038709/1899-12-22/ed-1/seq-8/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for

Nervous Debility
is often one of the most distressing after
effects of the Grip. It may Mso be caused
by overwork, worry, mental strain or excesses
of almost any nature. Whatever the cause,
a debilitated nervous system means that the
nerves lack nutrition. Feed the nerves and
life will renew its joys for you.
The best nerve food, and the most valuable
tonic (because it both builds up the blood and
strengthens the nerves) is Dr. Williams Pink
Pills for Pale People. Mundrcds of worrvout,
depressed men and women have been made
strond-ncrved , ambitious , energetic and
healthful by this remedy.
Anions the well-known men of the newspaper profession Is F.
J. Lawrence, of iXt Fourth Avenue, In-troit, Mien., who for the patt
eleven years ha been at hlH desk every day. He says :
"At one Vlme I wis In such a condition that my physician said
I would have nervous prostration; that 1 would have to stop news
paper work or I would go to pieces If I persisted In doing It, as I
was destroying what nervo force I had left. I lost flesh and had a
complication of ailments which battled skillful physicians. An
associate recommended Pr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale 1'eopla
and I gave them a trial. I can't say that I received any benefit
from the first box, but derived very good results from the second.
They gave me strength and helped my shattered nerves so that I
could get a full night's rest.
A great deal of pain In the small of the back I attributed to a
derangement of the kidneys. For this complaint Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills for Pale People worked wonders. Soon after 1 began
taking them regularly, tho pain ceased, and I felt like a new man.
I am greatly encouraged from the results of using a few boxes
and am confident that the pills will work a complete restoration
of my former condition." From Evenimj Xt u s, ltetroit, Mich.
Sold by all druggists or sent , postpaid, by the
Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y., on
receipt of price, SOcents per box, 6 boxes, $2.50
If in it.-u, w mi 13
ST GHfi U
V (
11 - --
t cf Aiucricd h-viutfover amilliuuacda-half refular re-.tr.s.
t Ary OTTR n te BTGGLE BOOKS, and the FARM JOTTTWM.
; (tne remaiuaer ci ivw, n, ioi. ii i' U will re sr"t tv rn.-.il t-. .
t nadrer.- lor a iioi.LAK lilLL. All who on! r at uuc wi.l lili.j h-k i ;
I l.ja:j'i!u' ie'T"!!;i!wiaii'l Hi Mothtr" Calendar.
t ifnnleoi FAWM JOURNAL und circular describing lilOCiLn I500KT. t:.
""tM T- R A TTT! VSON
CUA1 I". JL.VK.lNb.
t'm.m WEAK MEN CURED!
n T?.nTf!rJQ FACTS FOR DISEASED VICTIMS.
SECURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY!
AQE Vflll 9 Nirvotm and despondent; weak or debilitated; tirol moraine; noam
fiMS. luu 1 t-.tiwn -lif-Ubs; memory ooor: eaeily fiitiirued: eicifabl and irriU.'uJi
nf ornka, red and blarrd; pfinple on face; droame and aitht
.u..v.f , ii. . 1 .: 1 im .tt, i.u.; tiWiUoUUi; want ot couudciite, lac ot
uTgt mid etrentt WT 0A CURE YOU I
RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K. 2 K.
jo:::; . :.;:tL::;. john . aianlin.
LirOkk At'lkk -IMkA'IMCMT.
NO NMFS OR TESTIMONIALS USEO
VARICOCELE,
EMISSIONS and
I.VIPOTENCY
CURED.
epecialidU to all uiy aClicted fellowmeu."
CURES GUARANTEED OFT
-1 laid the foundation of my
rain. Iyitr on a "uhi Mfo
an ipnre
eatwi coinplti tbe wrrk. I had all the eyniptoms of
NervuDu DobilitykQuktn eyes.rtnintiiouo, dmin in r.rine,
nrrvouti, w"J: Luc'.:, Cz. b;;MH canned my hair to
fall out, Iwine pHiLi, nlrors in moiith nnd on tontrne,
b!r UliOS on l.'.f, I t'.ntuft Go. 1 1 ti ird Drs. lUnrtHly
Ucth&ii. ,ht-i i.lvrtJ iuv t. htV.U tigor
tvT" V Varicocele, hmisuans, AW v jus Dibiiity, Seminal
Weakness GUet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse,
Kidney and fir?rf- 7)itr,r
17 YEARS IN DETROIT.
READER!
Are jrpo a rictini liar
nailer has yonr Kuxvl ben
IrV.n ;ri!?ilintJ'i11 cnr n-
wntvLiNiivi rnsc. no rriKunr wnn nns ireaieuTOU, write r.r an honept opinion Free
of Charge charges reasonable. BOOKS FREE "The Golden Monitor" (illustrated), on
Di of Men. Inclose pte. 2 rent. Nhi1h1.
nr-NO NAM'S USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI
VATE. No medicine 0 nt C. O. D No namsi on boxes or envel
opes. Ryerythlnar confidential. Question list and coat of Tront-
ment, FREL.
niK irCMNCnV 1CnRAM No.mb shelly sr. Hi
A Tarni Lir-rary of uncqunPcJ value fraction.
Up-to-date, Concise and L'omrrch:a?ive hcn.:
soracly Printed and licduritully Illustrated.
By JACOB BIGG LE
No. 1-KICiGLC SIOKSU BOOS
All.'ilxMit llor a Ciunmoii-St n.-e Tre.itie, with liv, r
74 illustrations ; a standard work. Price, o i nt .
No. 2 liiUuU: IU;1KV MJUii
All about growing Snii'l I-'ruits read im l If .trn !-. .
C'Ti'iiT"' J prOfO li r'T'ni'urt if t f ' ' i .
varieties fo c ?':?r i'.Hr tr':itur; !. 1 rco, ; r-v
No. 3 niGQLR POULTRY BOOK
All ahout Poultry ; the best Pou'trv H-.nk In rxl-t 'i
tuls cvcrytlun.ir; withjj colored hnr-nk.ern r- ... .t , ,
of all the principal breeds; with 1.3 other iliuatiuii ; . .
1 1 ice, 50 Ctuts.
No. 4 BKiOLE COW BOOK
All about Cows nn I the Dairy I?tisities ; having n prf ' t
- '; o iit.iiii 0 1 'I'lcred 1 if.--lik.t 1 tprtxIiKtioiir. l....t
inniT i.iuMrauoBS. 1 rite, 50 in ...
Just out. All ntHMtt Hog llreedin,', I'eetiir.r, u; - '
crr.'g, Jf-t-a te. CcT!r.ir.s r S l.c.v.t... ; '
: .: ju:: : vl.;;rt.-'i:i. Tiivw.y, CvMkJ.
ThettlOOLH BOOKS rre iinirpie.orifrinnl,r.rfiil yon 1 - r
f .' . i i ;. t i i Ml.; lll.i ' 1 ! i. . . . 1
uie h-iviii nn enormous faie Last, it, .Ni.ii.i : : 1
South livery one who keeps a HorFe, Cow, ' . -Chicken,
or yrows small l'niits, oiujht to .2.d i.'-.. t
to way lo- the biOULU bOOKb. 1'hs
A Tft Tiff TTTTT V
Wfl B 5 i f h v fi
Is your paper, made fir you and not a rni.-fit. It Is r-rr
oLl i; it m the tfrit boiledhi'.vn, hit-the-nail-on-tel. "..(! -quli-ai;i.i-"jii-ii.4vi'-s:ud-it,
I arm nrd Hons 1.. .i. , ; r,, a 1.
the world the biirgrst Pnier e fits f-izc in the t'rilen St.T .
Address, FARM
I'lIXLAM LPTtlA
y
IS
K
f!
H
M
CIIAH. POWERS. CUA8. WWEKS.
8
WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.
r
John A. Munlin ty: "I was one of th conntlcs rlc
tiins of etrlr itoorane comiuwced at IS rmri of as. I
trii MVn inUcMi firm and npfnt wif Kent th?I.
1 gar op ia diair. Tbm rtnin on try j-tm wero
weakening dot intliot m well my ctoal and physical
life. Mjr brothe- a l.ijd mo a a last rc-oit to roiisolt
IJr. Kennndy 4 Kcrcan. 1 commenced their New Method
TraUuftnt and in a few weeks was a new roan, with new
life and ambition. This was four years ayo, and now 1
am married and happy. 1 recommend these reliable
NO PAY4- CONFIDENTAL.
to hlood df-
Syphilis, Emissions
Varicocele, Cured.
and happiness." CHAS. TOWERS.
ti
200.000 CtlRRD, NO RJ9K,
yoa lost hope? Are on contemplating
mar.
diseased Have Ton inr tMhwi? Onr
jt ,m d f'r others it will do U,r ou.
DETROIT, MICH.
Saved by the Sexton
By A. A. Smith.
Written for thl rt"r-
Author's Note: "Bavrd by the Sexton"
is a etory baned upon facta, which were
widely exploited by the newspapers at the
time. For obvloua reasons fictitious names
of the parties to the grcwsonie adventure
are used, and the name of the city rear
which it occurred is purposely omitted.
Newspaper readers with retentive mem
ories, however, will be able to recall both
the parties to what may aptly be termed
a providential crime, and the locality in
which It occurred. The lady who owed so
much to the desecration of her Brave lived
for tight years afterward and became the
mother of two healthy children, but the
guilty sexton did not long survive the
bhock rc-aultlr.i; from his ghoulish idght's
work.
IT WAS by no moans a tenement house
iiicture upon which the sexton tfazed
us he .stepped across hU own threshold.
The room was bmall and poorly fur
nished, but it (Wd not present the gaunt
aspect of poverty in the lowest degree.
There were four rooms in the little
house and they contained all the es
sentials for comfortable living, even
though the carpets were made, of rags
and the scant furniture was worn and
faded. The most dismal feature of the
place was the discontented face of the
woman who was lacing him in the low
rocker.
"What makes you fco late, Thomas?"
fche asked, fretfully.
"i had to finish digging the Whitnell
grave," the man replied. "The fu
neral's to-morrow, and there's a lot to
do. Three dollars is not such a bad
day's work for us, is it, Mary?"
"Had," she repeated, turning wearily
away. "It's all been bad ever since I
could remember. What an aspiring
man you are, Thomas, to talk about a
beggarly day's work a if you had found
a fortune."
Sexton William.-) only siylnd uk he.
went in to his supper. Long experi
ence had taught him the futility of try
ing to dispel the fretful melancholy of
his w ifc
"The same old bill of fare again,"
sighed the querulous woman opposite
him. "Who wouldn't get tirtd of the
same old things over and ocr agaiu?
I do wish wi could lie like soinebjdy
for awhile, just for the novelty of it."
"Why don't you talk?" she demand
ed, as Thomas ate his supper in silent
constraint. "One would think it a.-
gloomy enough without bringing your
graveyard manners into tho house. I
suppose the Whitnells will make a
swell affair of their funeral to-morrow?"
"indeed they will," responded her
1 husband, brightening w ith the thought
of hating something of interest to im
part to his wife. "She is to be buried
in her w edding clothes. There's an ele
gant necklace and some, pearls, .and
diamonds."
"Diamonds!" exojaimed the wife.
"The idea of putting them into the
ground. It's a shame."
"Worse than the barbarians," replied
the fctxtou, "but she itqusUd it, and
the mourners seem more anxious than
anything that the corpse shall present
a striking appearance. The under
taker said it would be done, and I saw
her laid out in them myself."
"Oh, dear!" fairly groaned the wom
an. "And all that shameful waste
while I can't have as much as a pair of
new curtains to rppTao? theso wretched
rags. If I were a man I'd I'd rob that
grave before those jewels should be put
to such a shameful use."
II.
It was a night well fcuited to the
work of ghmd. The wind crime
great waves, ahrieklng at the height
of its fury like a soul in torment, then
dying away in & sighing breeze. Great
billowy clouds were vept acros the;
sky, while a driving mist would break
at intervals Wito a sudden dash of rnin
as a great storm eloud was swept
along, hi the grewsome churchyard,
where marble shaft gleamed weirdly
through he rain and darkness, the
light of a lantern played fantastically
about a new-made grave, llending over
the soggy clay was the figure of a man.
With desperate energy he plied the
spade, and a he threw auie the little
heaps of raLn-hoaked earth his eyes
shot fearful glances into the weird and
ominous night. To ais guilty senses
the howling of the wind seemed like
the voices of offended spirits of the
dead, and from out the rnin nnd dark
ness ha could .'.ec in fancy the accusing
menace of ghostly hands. Great drops
of perspiration fell from his face and
mingled with the rain trickling in rivu
letw down his rubber coat, lie trem
bled like an aspen; his knees were
weak from superstitious dread, and yet
with dogged resolution he applied him
sttlf to his ghoulish task.
"Curse the rain," he muttered,
straightening uje and resting for a
moment. "Hut it'a a lucky touch. So
danger of interference on such a night
as this. Mary'll get her curtains all
right enough."
For an hour he tosstd aside the sticky
clay, and then his tnk grew easier.
The grave sheltered him somewhat
from the wind, and the earth became
less rain-soaked and heavy. Another
hour and his spade scraped upon the
cover of the box inclosing the casket,
lie carefully scraped away the remain
ing clods nnd threw them out, and then
as. he prepared to remove the cover
he tinspenknble terrors of hia task
swept over hlia afcuin. With choking
br"th he stood up nnd peered over the
edge of the grave he had desecrated,
his tortured fancy halting between the
terrors of the churchyard and the aw
ful proximity of the thing beneath his
feet.
"The first time; the first time," he
muttered, striding to regain his com
posure. "And I wouldn't do it now,
only it kinder seems as if I owed it to
M.-,ry. And the"- l.r glrnced -Vu'drr-tngly
down at the box beneath hit feet.
She doesn't need them any more, nnd
It was wicked lo bury them with her."
Controlling himself with a great ef
fort, he completed his grewsome work.
Standing close against one side of the
grave, he lifted the cover of the box
from beneath hia feet and threw it out
upon the pile of earth. Then, kneeling
upon the lower part of the casket, he
quickly removed the screws from the
upper lid and threw it, too, outside of
the grave. The sexton had reached the
climax of his task, llefore him in the
dim light of his lantern lay the uncov
ered face of the dead woman, white and
cold In the repose of death. In the mo
ment of the greatest tension the sexton
grew a little calmer. He lifted the
dainty hand and sought to pull the pre
cious jewel from th? finger. It would
not yield to his effort, and he lifted the
woman's head and removed a costly
locket and a string of pearls. Then he
returned to the sparkling ring upon her
finger.
It would not yield, lie tried again
nnd again, and as he worked all the
wild fancies of the night rushed oer
hirn again until he was on the point of
fleeing from the grave without the
jewel. Then with sudden resolution he
took a knife from his jKjckft, intend
ing to amputate the linger. He pressed
the keen blade upon her finger, and
tlowi
Throughout the e-ity of the dead there
echoed one awful, frenzied scream,
then another and another. From the
desecrated grave out leaped the sexton,
like a fiend escaped from torment, and,
dashing down his lantern, he rushed
nwy from that fearful place as though
llSillllfl
m ii www
UlJFOfU: III.M T,AY THE UNCOVERED
FACE.
all the wild fancies of his guilty brain
had taken form and were rusdiing in
pursuit.
in.
Twelve o'clock found Mr. Whitnell
pacing restlessly up and down iLe par
lor of his lonely mansion. He could not
sleep, nnd his own room contained so
many reminders of his departed wife
that he could better endure the pr.rlor,
where he had lat seen her radiant vith
health and happiness.
The stroke of one echoed drearily
through the house, and still the grief
stricken man paced up and down. For
another hour he wrestled w ith the mem
ories of his wedded life, and then ex
Vausted rn1'ipn wnn-l him that he
must seek repose. He turned sorrow
fully to leave the mom, when, quick,
clear and distinct, above the roaring of
the storm, he heard the summons of the
doorbell.
Mr. Whitnell wan not a man to be op
pressed by superstitious fears. Jle de
spised such weakness in others, yet now
a nameless dread swept over him. He
went t !!. window :an -.a fed into
the night. Despite his self-command,
he almost cried ou? aloud, for in the fan
tastic glare of the electric licrht he be
held a gholly, hite-i obed Igurr sund
ing nt Ids door. For a moment the
firmly-irrounded beliefs of a lifetime
were swept aw ay, and Mr. Whitnell waa
thrilled with the superstitious fancies
he despised. Then a shriek echoing
through the house recalled him to Lis
senses. A servant had opened the door
and seen the ghostlike figure and then
fled, erviiu' that the spirit of his mis
tress was standinrr at the door. Mr.
Whitnell's quick brain grasping at a
Migjjertion of the. truth, he ran down
and caught in his arms the cold, wet,
trembling, yet living, form of hia res
urrected wife.
IV.
In the eening papers of that day the
marvelous story was told, needing no
coloring of imagination to make it more
sensational. They told how Mrs. Whit
nell had been awakened from a cata
leptic trance by the pressure of a knife
upon her finger; how she had sat up
with every sense awakened to feel the
cold, damp walls of the grave about
her; how, with those awful screams
ringing in her earn, she awoke to a
renlirrtlon rf hr trvfh, f!!!!ng her with
a terror scarcely less great than the sex
ton's; ocd how, with returning reason,
she had climbed out of her grave and
made her way through the storm to
her own home. Graphically they de
sTibcd the appearance of the grave,
which hundreds visited the heap of
earth, with the spade and lantern ly
ing upon it, and the casket lid and cover
of the box. They pictured the joy of
the reunited fnndly, but in it all there
was no definite mention of the shat
tered, half-crazed sexton, whose mind
would never recover from the terrors
of that night's work. Powerful influ
ences from a grateful, reunited family
had been at work, and the papers con
tained only the statement that, while
the w-ould-be grave robber was known,
the happy ending of his ghoulish at
tempt had not onlj saved him from
prosecution, but hwl brought him sub
stantial reward.
r.leetrleltr In C.imum Maklna:.
Klrctricity has tccn applied to the
manufacture of glass. A pot of "batch
?fn ) Ihn malted In 1' r. Inutes that
formerly required 30 hou-s.
CAT WITH A HISTORY.
roti Terror, Olllftl Hat Killer
MslbpoI of the lulled Mates
Ship Annapolla.
Although Commander IngCihol, of
the gunboat Annapolis, has made the
itu- of the cadets and crew hi New
York pleasant by allowing us much
shore leave a possible, there is one
member of the ship's company who is
not permitted to land.
Tom Terror, official rat killer and
mascot of the An'uapoli.s, is again In
disgrace und has forfeited ull libcity
until the completion of the cruise.
Tom is not in irons, although hisctf
fense that of attacking nn officer is
n most serious one, bet as he is already
branded as a deserter from the Monon
gahela he is not given another chance
to "cut und run."
Tom Terror is a noted figure in the
United States navy, and comes from a
long line of naval cats. He was born
on cob dock, Hrooklyn navy yard, some
three years ago, and nil of his brothers
and cousins ure now honorably serving
the ships of the navy as rat killers and
mascots.
One day when the monitor Terror lay
nt the navy yard last spring Tc m
strolled on board, made a careful sur
vey of quartern of the crew, roamed
arouud the quarter-deck, curled himsHf
up ou the rug in the captain's cabin and
went to sleep.
lie had a record of having licked every
other cat on cob deck, and since there
were no more cats to fight Tom con
cluded to fight and cat foi hisenvn
try. Tom was regularly adopted by te
ship's company of the Terror. Full en
listment papers were made out giv
ing him the rating of rat killer and
mascot. The papeis wtc properly
lilt (1 a::d Tom's sea life began.
He saw service in the blockade, of
Havana and participated in his humble
capacity in several small naval engage
ments, and when the Tenor af'er
wlicr.i he was nu!;;-d - returned to
., 1 ' ti . t ; 1 1 . 1 . . , 1 1 1. i :,. . c.- i oi'
the crew, joined the receiving ship
Franklin.
From the Franklin he v.nsrcgulaily
t ;ais f t n d to thr cu:ili-.at Moiu.n
ga.hcla. T. ifc nn board the Monongah'ln
was made as pleasant as possible for
7-
"tom, the Termor..
Tom, but alas! the fighter w:s ungrate
ful. He scratched two of the oilicers,
bit one of the men and exhibited an ap
petite that bordered on gluttony a sin
not to be tolerated iu the navy or in
any other walk of life.
Still Tom was loved on board, nnd
though his shortcomings were duly en
tered upon his ship's papers he was
treated v.ell.
)n .into. ' tbf Mor.o?'"; 1 -N i?d t"
Annapolis lay side by side at Norfolk.
Vr :n probably ln-anl from 1l sailors
all nbout the pleasure cruise the An
napolis was to take with the naval
cadets on board of the social enter
tainments that were to add zest to the
voyage of tho trip to West Point, and
.Newport, and Tom made up his mind
to desert the Monongahela and join the
Anna I' d is.
Just bffore the Annapolis weighed
anchor n meage was received by Com
mander Ingeisol fioni the Monongahela
uaulli Will tilt.i lUl.l 1U1U1, U lUt.lij
cat, was on board.
The eomrnnndcr ordered a search.
The messenger from the Monongahela
lok.d d..'..'.Vu.-., but .s;.Iutid and left.
The Annapolis weighed anchor and
started out to sea. The bugle call for
v.ppf vn sotTTjded, ' ?.m i;p from the
depths of the fo'castle walked Tbm.
He climbed upon a 1-inch gun, looked
around to ree if the Monongaheka waa
still in sight, and finding himself safe
stalked majestically to the bridge and,
gazing calmly into Commander Inger
sol's eyes, said:
"Pur-r-r-r."
The gallant commander w-s almost
overcome with nstonishinent. He knew
thnf tWs wr Tom Terror, ft deserter,
but he couldn't take him back to land,
po he did the next best thing he adopt
ed him os n member of the ship's com
pany. Tom quickly made friends with the
cfilccrs, the cadets and the crew. He
is no respecter of rank, and insists on
making his own rules. He will sit and
purr by the hour nt Lleuteunnt Com
mander Hartlett's side, scratch fun-loving,
teasing cadets and then steal a
tempting morsel from the crew's mess.
lie is u vital roller, and so far has
proved an efficient mascot.
On the books of the Monongahela
Tom - put down a a descitr, cud
may some day have to face n court
il, but nt prrfcnt he is n happy,
1- rclcs3 cat. He hns but one sorrow.
Th-re are uo ether cats on the An
napolis with whom he can fight. N. V.
Join; !.
Old Stamps far a Deficit.
To bnlnni"? the finances of the Island
of Et. Helena, Mr. Chamberlain, the
colonial secretary, has authorized the
sal of t "ft ,0C0 v.orth ff old lsucn of
postage stamps.
S
TOLEDO r-N
ARBOW
Pcsth Michigan) C
RAILWAY. L u-
Mj'V.i.- -.y . . '
y'.:'. .-''.. ' il'.ri'U'in
",-" 'B.vcirv''
- 4 iini.r rr - ( .
2:p!h""Z r,.:.:t
TIM KTABI.r.
Innffeel Nov. lith. 1)7.
TRAIN'S I.EWK AI.JIA
Mo. l-l,' i:i p ru.
No. S-8:40, p. m.
W. . HKNNET,
Oen.tans Avu
Toledo, (thin.
No. ;i 7::;.i. r.. c.
No 4 h-.-Jfi. ;. ) .
II. J. W INCHKI I
At'-!if, Alma.
TOLEDO, SUMNAW MFsKIC; )N If V.
L-avo Afrhley. 1 Lv. Aflilt-y for Detroit
t-M u. ir. for .Mimkuron at IMO 1 . ru.
'i ;") . m. for Muk on cloo 'orm ' i"n- are
JNO. W. t.Oht). ' 111 Mci- Ht Ow. xSO.IlMirfli
Train.; Mantia-r. Iwith ll trains if !., O.
Detroit. H. A; V. Ky.
IHe.n. Fi.fcTt'iiKi!.T. V. A.
I la troit, Mi' b.
Grand Trunk R'y System.
rr.s
rr7T - 7. w
1 ' r- I I , t J l.r 1
ill.. .iSVJ. ft
1 .. . . r
I
TOI.KI o. s A(.1N.V Mr.-JKI.GON IJV.
In IT- ; NoVK.MKKIi lit. jsj-i
hastiioi'n:'.
1) lily Kx Sun
a in: a m
MesLctiDri Lv 4 H 00
searta " ' '11' '1 :i
- .'..ir spr.i.s n (ui 10 10
i p m
;t'"TiVl!l" .... I,v , 1; :i I 4i
' : '.': t -J -r
ra-MMi City " ; S ( x
i
' -y " s o; r, ro
Jt t " , h ; ? 05
liirar;t " I ii 1 S UJ
! troit r i II Mi;
YY KSTIJtOl ND
U(-lt Lv 1 (i)
h rn
!,-r'i' ! t; :o : s
- J'-i . r, l.j
y'"; Ar s T, 7 10
'rirs..i! city m '.1 1 it p.)
heri)an ' 11 1; i'i or,
lif envlili- " i ;(; 1 ; 15
p III
( ti. 1 Sp- irv " 111 in 4i)
fc: artH " 10 I '!
v'il.i)).in r ! 1 10
I
' ,,.vi.,v
Unify.
A. H. i '(iVKV. Af'r
Owo.-o, .,1,.
.iCTUAVi JL'NK. lit, 1SC0.
. 1 . 1 "v ' .
r.liANI) KA1MDS & WESTERN II U
I . in. 1 a . im . 1
sukiriRw Ar 11 ioi 9 45
1 " " L't. Loui It' 10 8 21
ti ,J0 :ti ALMA I v TO 0s 8 17
j M" H M ' KiverdHle I 9 4uj T Mi
T ';7 " Ar .... .i.tliiuui' I v V 40i
jl14.'i IJig Hapid 3 2 80
I 1 1 IV Ioi.ia 7 3 4 41
j ftiitop.; How sni City 8 3o 6 5
i IMOIM. Ar ...(iratid Hapidn. . . . Lv I 7 P 5 10
!" '!' I hfr-rj,, ' . H 00i
! a. ra.lp. in Ip.m.ia.m.
! (;ko. DeIIivkn, GenT. PaH'r Airemt,
firond Rar iilc.Mich.
II. .1. Wjschell. Atftiit, Alma
A. F. EAGON...
wen Linving
Kstimntes cheerfully given on ap
plication. AGENT FOR WIND MILLS
Briswold House
Lor. (iraiid Kivcr Ave. and GrlswoM sr.
I OLTROIT, MICH
Kate ti.W per Day. First-class in every 1 artieo
lar.
POSTAL & MOKKY. Proprietor.
Remember
Quality and not Price is our
motto. We defy competi
tion IN
WAGON AND CARRIAGE
REPAIRING.
ALSO
Horseshoeing aud
General Blacksmithing.
Second-hand one horse wagon,
i'RKy aB(l car ir ale cheap.
WKT. GILUIBB.
Dvsnensia Cure
Digests what you eat.
It artificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and rocon
fetructing the exhausted digestive or
gans It is the latest discovered digest
aut and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in
stantly relieves and permanentlvcnrcs
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
iMaiiiicnco, Sour Stomach, Nausea.
SicklIcadacho,Gatralgla,Crsmpsfana
ill ether results of Imperfectdlgestlon..
Prepared by L. C DeWitt A Co., Cblcago.

xml | txt