Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 February 1896 — Page 3
A Miracle in Vermont.
THE WONDERFUL EXPERIENCE OF A WELL-KNOWN CHELSEA MAN
Stricken with mi Incurable DlKruw ami Y-t CMHII. {Front/he jirfiw and I'atriul. Montpclier, 17.)
Eisltt yi-ttrs ago Geo. Hutchinson moved from Hradlord to Chelsea, Vt., and bought the sawmill at the littler place. 11- was known as one oi' the strongest men in tlmt se'.-lion. On Dee. l.'i,'!'- while at work in the mill, he was struck iu llit* back by a flying board, which seriously injured him and incapacitated him tor work of any kind. Asa result oi' this. Locomotor Ataxia net in, (this is vi t'..nn oi' paralysis which deprives the patient of all use of bis lower limbs.) The Aryns & Patriot interviewed Mr. Hutchinson to-day, aDd his story is liere -riven in his own words.
My back achcd continually ami my legs began to grow numb and to be less ami less usable. Hy the 15th of April 1 could do absolutely nothing and was scarcely able to stand. physicians advised me to go to the Mary Fletcher Hospital at Hii: linirton, to be treated, and 1 took their atlvic. When I left home my friends bade ine ^ood-bvu, uevcr expecting in see me alive again. The physicians at the hospitul told me thai mv ease was a .serine wtie and I was completely discouraged. I remained at the Lospital seven wet us and took the medicines which the doctors gave me. 1 felt better at the hospital and thought that I wis recovering, arid went home to continue their treatment, which I did for two months, anil also had an electric battery under their advice. The improvement, however,did not continue and 1 Iu-_'nn to give up h"pc. Aliens It, 1893, 1 could not. gi-t out .•!' my chair ithout assistance, and if I got down upon the lloor, 1 could not .get up alone. .Abiiit thi- tunc I chanei'd to reel an •nut nf the wonderful curative powers of Dr. William-' I'ink Pills for Pali: People in cases similar to my own. I did not have any faith iu tie- Pills but thought a trial could do no harm. I bought smne without telling anyone what I was going to do. After I hud be.-ii taking them some time I found thai, for tin- fir. time in months I was aide to walk ili.w: to the post ollice, and my neighbors begun to discuss the marked improvement in inv health. As I continued the medicine I coininncd to improve, and soon recommenced work in the mill, at first very lightly, and increasing as 1 was able and as I gained in health and spirits, and now for the pa^t three months 1 have been working ien hours per day almost as steadily as 1 ever did.
I feel well, eat wel! and sleep as well as I ever di4 anil 1 have no pain anywhere."' The reporter talked with several otln-r irentlenien in regard to the ease of Mr. Hut.-bin-on, who Mated that any statement he might make would he entitled to entire credence.
Dr. liams' Pink Pills contain all the elem t,s ece^sarv to give new life and neim ss to the blood and restore shuttered nerves. They are for sal" by all druggist --, or mav be had by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Couipanv, Schenectady, X. Y., for SOc. per box, or 0 boxes for ^.ou.
N
EPPS'S COCOA
BREAK FAST—Ki:PPKK.
"By a thorough knowledge of tlie mutual aws which govern tho operations of il'.cestioii aDO nutrition, and by a careful application of the flnn properties of well-soiccte'l Cocoa. Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast anil supper a delicately tlavorod beverage wl.ioil may ve us many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the !iidieiou use of such ortlclos of diet that a constitution inay ue gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies aro floating around us ready to attack wherever tlieiv is a weak point. Wo may oscape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well lortttied with pure blood and a proporlp nourished frame Civil Service Gazetto. Maoe simply with boil ing water or milk. Sold only iu luilt-pound tin by Cirocers labelled tliuo: JAMES KITS & CO.. Ltd., Homoepathie ('hem ists. London, Knglank.
To
.H
Km
aU
enRJ3
THE EDITOR I have an absolute
remedy for Consumption. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been :il ready permanently cured. So proof-positive am 1 of its power that 1 consider it my duty to send tu-o bottles free to those of your readers who have Consumption,Throat, Bronchia! or l.ting. Trouble, if they will write me their express and postofTice address. Sincerely, T. A. SLOCUM, M. C., 183 Pearl St., New York,
Tlit* Editorial and lhismcsa Manapt'tnont of tbib l'aper Guuruutvu this yeucrous I'rojiuiitiuu.
\VANTKl):— S«*v»*rnl trustworthy g'Mitl»*inon or !ndii!8 to trjivfl in Indiana forosi-uhlisti*"!, reliable hous». Salary $7M) n*d Sternly position, KIIWOHO iffor^n-'c nd addroned and stamped fiiwlope. 1m* Dominion Company, third lioor, Omaha Uldjr.. i-ht^ago, 111.
Go South at Half Rates-
'Pi'-kets on sale as In-low. :it oie- Cure lV.r tlio round ttip plus ia.OO via tho nr''n.! i^ie-"M rcHctvit Hnuli'. liouud trip liekt'ts will in«.u stilts 11out all points Norm to il [mints South on tho £uetn it Cr«'SL'..nt Itoute .-mil A. (!, S. K. if, south of Somerset, Ky., in Kctilurkj-, Tennessee, Alul:itu t. Mi«-sissip|)i, Luiiisi.-oiii, Texas, Arkansas. Arizona, itntl to'points east of and inolii'litit! ('lmrlottu and Sjilisbui in North Carolina. .March ltllh, Ibilli,
Tickets aro also sold on tl:is date to puiul- nu tlie Mobile A Ohio It. south of Meridian. 't.\cept Jloiiili'. Ala.I and to points in (ioorgia on the Ci. S. ,t K. and t'entrai of t:a. K. K's.
Tickets aro gootl for:iti 'lays to return. StopOvers will lie allowed under certain coudiiio-is on tickets except Carolina point". Ask agents in icgard to slop-overs and rciuin limit".
Ono Way Sctilers' Ickcts nre on -ale via tlm liuoon A: Crescent Houte. ®n the llrst Tu"-id!iy in each month to Somerset. Ky.. ami nil points Houtl: thereof in the state of Kentucky: also all points ill Alabama, (ieor^ia. l'loi !a. N'ortli ftinl South Carolina. Teuie'-see. ,M ississi|.pl and Louisiana, located east ol' the Mississippi Hlvor.
Information in r« aid to schedulci*. rat-s, tho securing of tickets, choice ©I routes, de ck-!-iag of baKisaue. etc., chei-rlulty giv -n u|ion ails'' plication to the uiidersiguei: g/Chas. SV. Zeli, D. 1'. A.. 4th It ltaiso. Cfncitiual.
Ohto. W. A. I'.eckiei-, N. I*. A.. ILL Adams St., Chicago. Illinois C. A. Baird.T. IV A-. e«r. Woodward .leflereon At. Detroit, Mi. h. W. \r Uuunavuiit. T. I'. A., t'liivelaml. O. W. W. ItrookM, C. T. A., -till and Itace. Cincinnati. tJhio. W. W. Jiuios. Immigration Agl, Port Huron, Mich. W. C. KINKAUSON, Gen'J 1'nss'r Agl., Cincinnati. Ohio. :i w.
Reports from Germany indicate ibat electric plowB, hoes and potato diggers will Boon be successfully at work in that country.
Th« Cucumber Sponge.
In the encumber sponge (Etiplectella cncuinlx'ij wo have a specimen of one which lies upon the mud after the rummer of its uanie.sake, which it somewhat resembles. Perhaps, however, the must beautiful nf all those fiilicious sponges is Enphvtella asperjjillum, or, as it is comainiily nulled, Veuus' flower basket. It is like' a beautiful horn of glassy libers nr a n'"acefnl bouquet holder. The first speeiineu of this sponge in England came into the possession of tho late Pro:essdr Owen in 1841. It wits held by him as a fjrt -a1 treasure. It was soon followed by a few more specimens, which were sold in tin: market, at about £0 apiece, but now that- they have been found to be so plentiful they may be bought for as many shillings. These sponges were found bv the Challenger expedition to be growing in vast abnnrl-
ance in certain spots in tho deep water" inanity in creating among tin- Philippine islands and also I these days of short off tho coast of Brazil. "They live wars the ol type of
buried in mud which is so soft and loose us not. to crush them or in auy way tc impede the assumption of their elegant form, and thoyaie supported in then position and prevented from sinking bv a fringe of glassy spicules. "The tube nf this specimen from tin: Philippines, after the death or the sponge, is frequently inhabited by one, sometimes by a pair, of decapod crustaceans. He reminds ono forcibly of the hermit crab we have all seen living in dead shells upon our own shores. "These," says the same author, "tire so often found togoi herthat only a few years ago a paper v. us written to show that this sponge wa*-' a wonderful habitation constructed by this crab."'—Good Words.
Speechless and Swollen.
A story at the expense of Sir William Hareoiirt is worth repeating...-Before his recent departure fur the continent. 1 he ex-chancellor of the exchequer spout some time at the seaside, and on one ocrasi'jn visited a man-of-war lying on the Hampshire coast.
After dinner, the weather proving rather rough, the captain, an unusually small and dapper man, suggested that .Sir William should sleep on board, and thoughtfully surrendered his own berth for the night to his distinguished guest.
Next morning, at the early hour when the captain usually rose, the' latter's sailor servant, who knew nothing of the change of berths, brought a cup of coffee to the cabin door autl knocked once or twice without receiving an answer. Somewhat alarmed, the servant popped in his head and asked: "Don't vera want- your coffee this morning, sir?"
The only reply was in the nature of a growl, and the terrified sailor beheld it gigantic, figure turning over under the bedclothes. Dropping the cup of coffee, the faithful servant rushed to the ship's surgeon, exclaiming "For goodness' sake, sir, come to the captain at once. He's speechless, ami swollen to ten times his natural size."' —Strand Magazine.
The I'utUur of the Cocktail. The coekKtil was the invention of Colonel Carter of Culpeper Court House, Va. Many years ago in that locality there was a wayside inn named the Cock and Bottle, the semblance of an old hnglisli tavern, and which bore upon its swinging sign it cock anil bottle, meaning thereby that draft and bottled ale could bohadwithiu—the "cock.'' in old vernac'lar, meaning the tap. He, therefore, who got tho last and muddy portion of the tap was said to have received the "cot ail.
Upon ia:e oi C'.sn.n. when Colonel Carter was u' i.jc a to the indignity ot having litis ji.:-t!«!y beverage p'.'.t before him. lie 11.:•
jr..
and xel.i
A pres:
Tho Hcv JJii'vi! logo! her a mourn e. en 'I IJ dren." a n-.r.:iiie
r. iv upon the floor
1
Me. eol'ter I \, ill drink
cocktails oi yo\. 1 ewing. and then and tIK it-, "'t.-p'rul evidently by tho spirit i.? (i.,iivn.e:c, 1 da*hod together bitters, sugar, iIn- o.l of lemon peel and some-''! i- n. and thus and then anil then- v. as the o!.git:al tuck,ail concocted.— ri..I:8stS: ia Tin.es.
A I*rili!:itft
I! coarse of an rk recently, had t-' ci otmcartl from handed a sheet o1 ot ctator, a I imid lookii" prt-fessor. who tlid ...ii ".nced that after it
Vi
exhib.ti'M iii X' ono of the andii pack ard tb.i :i paper to a io, In ing blon man not. see I lie aiM. hatl been remi" script ion of ii on tho hearts, a or. "Is that it— lit' eight of IK,iris.' asked tiie pYoli«. or. That's all right. answeied ti'e iim.il looking man. 1'. he wa-- \e: i.:!sci(ii'ii.us man. :t lattrhe:r i^'l mi it'll eg theaudier that tin !o,--o: l.n! ten paper. "iJ- •.
t.ii the p:...-k the tlo.i.t ld be foiiml writler ie cai v, its the tight o'-alo-n otti ii\ ilit* i,rofes
J: a
in! I 'It.-l.i ]l! 1:
if or c.-. .•
thom old. but neat y.all oi 'ill' There- if vide: told"'."i y.r.ir f. 1 deeu who li.ifh: ^iSr-.'ari ries to tli inini.-ter v.-i early on Aim: day nit no v, ". i: lir girl.'' im saai:"i nev ve. iicaut. 1 u: But I h. po you oiilu't ga'her tla in \i. tenlay. whe "No, sir," rt-j,i,i them this m- it!: in all vostcrdav
Professor Schuslich—I don't know what's the uiatti with me, doctor. I am perpetually limping today. Is it. locomotor ataxy, I wonder?
Doctor—Why, professor, you are walking with one foot on the curbstone and the other in the gutter. —Lustige Blatter.
In tbeCyclopeau buildings at Baalbec there are stones CO feet long,,4 feet thick and 16 feet wide. Some of them are 30 feet above the foundation.
The war
•I established 17RS».
by act of congress Aug.
Tlie 7»l ercenury.
The merconary lighting man is a person who seldom receives Ins duo reward during his lifetime or his just meed of fame after his death. The character is ono so alien to the age in which we live, it belongs so entirely to the days when fighting was tins only occupation for a gentleman, that it has forfeited alike our study and our sympathy. Volunteers we understand, but mercenaries wo do not. The world apparently has grown to think that fighting as a profession—the bare trade of arms uuconsocrated by auy sentiment- of cause or country—is not a noble thiug and should not, however ably and gallantly followed, be adjudged the highest praise.
Possibly the world is right, bnt we suspect, that change training of lighting more influence than
of system in the men has had fatmere abstract liuthis opinion. In service and swift professional tight
ing man has become extinct. In every country the recruit, is forced through a soldier's education at high pressure and returned to civil life, as speedily as pos- I siblo that, ho may earn money to pay for the education of others. No man, unless he be an oilicer. devotes his whole lifetime to tho military calling, and consequently tho low mercenaries—tho name is too ignoble for them—who tire knowu I to us iu those later times aro without exception officers—(Gordon, for instance, Valentine Baker and Hobart. It wasuot so of old, when tho rule was t.nce a soldier always a soldier, and the only school wits war. Then few men dreamed of rising to command except through the ranks, and many gentlemen preferred to stay till their lives in the ranks or at highest to carry the ensigns of their I companies. Veteran soldiers were worth their weight in gold, and though by no moans innocent of rapacity followed their calling from sheer devotion to it and thought themselves unlucky if tlr-y died in thoir beds.—Macmillau's Mag:: zine
Cotor Blind.
John Dal ton. wirhont whose discovery of the laws of chemical combination chemistry as an exact science could hardly exist, was wholly color blind. His knowledge of the fact came about by a happening of tho ijort. which we call chance. On his mother's birthday, when he was a man of 20, he took her a pair of stockings which ho had seen in a shop window labeled "Silk, and newest fashion. "Thee has bought me a pair of grand hose, John," said the mother, "but what made thee fancy such a bright color? Why, 1 can never show myself at meeting in hem. .Tohu was much disconcerted, but he told her that heconsitlered the stockings to be of a very proper go to meeting color, as thev were a dark bluish drab. "Why, they're red as a cherry, John," was her astonished reply.
Neither ho nor his brother Jonathan could see anything but drab in the stockings, and they rested in the belief that, the good wife's eyes were out of order until she, having consulted various neighbors, returned with the verdict, "Varra line stuff, but uncommon scarlet y."
The consequence was that John Dalton became almost- the first to direct tho attention of the scientific world to tho subject of color blindness.—Youth's: Companion.
Sure of
it
This Time.
"John! .Tolm!" Mr. Bi 11ns ceased snoring. "Wliat-'-s the matter, Maria?" "T re's a man iu the house. Listen!"' I "What?" "I hoard a heavy foot on thostairway Listen!"
Mr. Billus listened a moment. "I don't bear anything.'' "I do. Then—I heard it again There was no response but a snore. "John Another snore. "John Hi! 1ns, are you afraid to pet up?"
No response. Mrs. Billus lay down again. "If you can stand it to have the house robbed," she exclaimed wrathfully. "L can.
At the end of half an hour she spoke again "John
No answer. "John Billns!" "What's the matter now?'- 1 "I was mistaken. There wasn't any m'.m in the house. And there isn't any man in the house now, either. Hear that, do you?"—Chicago Tribune.
Glory Sufficient.
The barber's trade is everywhere ree-f ognizod as honorable, but Tho Commor-i cial Bulletin tolls a story tif one man who had peculiar reasons for magnify-/', in:: his oliice.
There was uuee a hairdresser in Bosre.•: vim numbered among his patrons many geutlemen of the medical profession. ne day, when operating upon on
1
is the .k- ihlv.i:h dity: •d ti.o chi.'.il. "I pullet! g. IJut ti.f v'was grov.*-
ol them, hrt broke forth in great glee: Vat you dink, dogtor? I haf been to dor hospital, uud vhile I vait to go up nntl cut a man's hair I see niarple busis of tie dog:ors. I.Jero was lugtor t-torer mid (levi. vas Dogtor Pee^elow in it de vig 1 dress for him dose dwenty years, in i.:rple. Uinlc of dot Von of my vigs in marple!
Information I'or the Teacher.
The teacher was asking questions— teachers are tjtnio ant- to ask iiucM-iuij.s, and tliev s.nu times receive curious ail-' swers. This question was as follows: "Now. pupils, how many mouth* have ii* days?"' "All of iliem, teacher," replied the boy ou the front seat. Utica Observer.
Expect* the WorKt-
I always expect the worst-in all thiugs and all cases, because I kuowr the worst is possible: therefore it is natural for me to expect the worst, and as it is the unexpected that happens, the worst does not often happen to me.—Fiber and Fablic..
ELECTRICITY IN THE EARTH.
Is It the Awful Force Tliat Will Finally lJextroy the
1
World?
"Take a spade, turn up a small quantity of soil, hold a portion in your hand, hold it to vonr ear, then smell it. You will observe first a slight motion, hoar a faint- sound as of the moving of distant timber, and readily notice tho odor of heat. Do you know that the forces held iu your hand aro from electricity that the earth for three feet deep is alive with tho invisible power and forms the secret of vegetable life? Waves of electricity aro constantly passing through the soil in unseen billows, thuskeeping the soil from sonring, as the billows of tho ocean keep the waters from becoming stagnant. To domonstrate this fact, go to some rock bound pool, dip out a small quantity of tho I polluted water, place it ill a bottle, cork and set usule ma warm place for a short time. Then take the bottle into a dark I room, shake the bottle, draw out the cork, and you will see tiny forks of blue lightning shoot out from the bottle, anil if you lc perfectly quiet you will hear faint nnitterings like thunder. This
conies ltom the flintlike rocks preventing the unbroken flow of electricity through the soil anil from the air boI coming charged anil emptying itself into tho water. "Electricity, as is being gradually shown, is fire—tho lire of friction, if you will, the first known by the inhabitants of our globe. Look.at an aro lampand sou its combined sparks as tliev emit from the carbons so swiftly that thov are taken for a regular flame of eye bedazzling light. In the ages to come the charge of electricity will keep on accumulating until some commotion of the earth will cause it to ignit •, when, in tho twinkling of an eye, our world, with till it contains, will be enwrapped and consumed by a conflagra tion that will startle if not frighten the inhabitants of other planets as they look down upon the flaming mass and see burn up ono of the greatest works of the
Almighty's creation." Philadelphia Times.
CREDITED MISS ROCKEFELLER.
She Couldn't. Ouite UntlerKtuml Why tile Shopman Wan So Gracioun.
A pretty story is told of Mrs. Harold McCormick while she was Miss Edith Rockefeller, showing tho simple manner in which she regarded her father's great wealth.
The incident occurred when she was a ptipil at. ono of tho fashionable NewYork schools. She, with a party of girls from her class, presented herself at a certain furniture dealer's to choose a gift for a favorite teacher. The price of the pretty writing desk, however, was more than tho sum in their possession. The girls suggested that if the desk was sent, they would forward the balance as soon :is possible.
The proprietor very politely, but also very decidedly, informed the girls that he could not- do as they asked. "But.," he said, "if you can think of any New York business man with whom auy of your fathers tire acquainted and who will vouch for you the matter may possibly be arranged. "Why," said the daughter of the great petroleum magnate. "I think my papa has an office down on Broadway. Possibly we can get the money there. "Who is your father?" queried the dealer. "His name is Rockefeller," replied the girl simply "John D. Rockefeller. Ho is in the oil business."
The merchant gasped and looked at the girl is amazement. "JohnD. Rockefeller your father? Is John D. Rockefeller good for $^0?" he repeated in excitement.
Then he recovered his presence of mind sufficiently to order the desk packed up and sent immediately, while Miss Edith, very much astonished at his unwonted excrement, thanked him with pretty and simple grace.—Philadelphia Press.
Many a boy starts out in life with the firm determination of conquering the world. He means to achieve success and wealth and fame. His intentions are *rood, and Ills will is stroiifr. If he has the bodily strength to carry him through, ln'.s ffo will be with achievement. Bodily strength and health are his greatest ccyiital. Without them he can hope for nothing. How mauv young men and young women are :l off just when the future seems
brightest and fullest of promise They are taken away by the disease which causes over one-sixth of all the deaths in the world—the disease which doctors call consumption. Consumption iias been considered incnrable, and the medical profession has never made a greater mistake than this. There is absolutely no reason in the world why consumption should be fatal why it should be even serious. It is a disease of the blood, and can be cured absolutely ant! always by purifying ar.d enriching the blood. The only exception to this is Uncase where the disease lia^ been neglected and improperly treated until it is stronger than the body—until the body has become so weak as to have lost the ability to recuperate. Dr. l'ierce's Golden Medical Discovery will cure 9S per cent, of all cases of consumption if used according to directions. It also cures all lingering coughs, bronchial and throat affections. There is 110 reason why the child of consump: tive parents need ever have consumption if its blood and lungs are strengthened by the proper use of the Discovery." All who have any reason to fear consumption, should read the chapters on that disease in Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser. This great medical work of 1008 pages, profusely illustrated, has reached a sale of over 6So,ooo copies. It will be sent free of charge on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailing only. World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663. Main Street, Bu£Talo, N. Y.
ol
for Infants and Children.
The fac-aimilo signature of
i!
You Know
Biitenmii Drop.-., ,'u, frvy Curilml, many so-cnlleil Soothing Syrups, ami most remedies for children i.re t-oinixisc«l of opium or morphine
^on opium \iu! morphine nre stui«-l_vinjr rinreotie poisons
Do Yon i. must countries lirmrjrists are not |ermi(tcil to sell'narcotic?' without label: -..ns4
Do Yon 7 'V/ I.|.„ y.iu should not i» rimt nny medicine to be given your u..Ioss J'ou or yot. iiiiy:-,ieian kuow of vvlim it is -oMi|«i'i'd
*^on -ii-.. t'nstoria is a purely \ej,'ctnl)lo prejiarution, and its ingredients is ni-:, with every bottle
Y° Know mat Cariorin is the prescription if tin- famous Tr: ParyThnt it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that moru Costorin is nc of all other remedies for children combined
Know that tho Patent Ofllee Department of the United States, and of other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use tho wori
C&storin and its formula, and that to imitate theni is a state prison offense
Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection wivi because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless?
Yon Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 3* cents, or one cent a nose
You Know that when possessed of this perfect prc]Kir&tlon, your children maybe kept well, and that you may have unbroken est'r
Well, these tilings are worth knowine. Tliey are facta.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria«
Read This Advertisement!
I you are in need of Groceries you will never have a chance to buy nfc such Low Prices. We will sell you Flour at the following low prices:
50 lbs Pride of oria 90c 25 45c 50 Wonder, all Spring Wheat. $1.00 25 50 50
Cheapest (ii'oc.ery House in Crawfordsville.
Strike a Ian
Through his stomach and you either gain or r: lose his good will. In givmy him a clean. well cooked .,
I'. S.—Ail Hot Drinks ten cents 011!v.
ket Stn-i't. Opposite Siit-rman Remember the place.
that Paregoric,
t» on every wrapper.
Big A Flour ..75c
25 40c All Package Coffee 20c One lb Good Baking Powder 10c One lb Rice 5C
The above are only a few items we mention as we haven't the space.
Furniture .1 Queen sware.
We have enlarged our si. '^noensware and made some change: in our store. We now have tho mo^t complete line of Qneensware in Crawfordsville. To our stock of Furniture we are adding new stvles every day and our lines are very large. Remember we sell stoves.
HOT LUNCH
with every drink wo have gained his best wishes for sticcoss. Come in and trv ow when in town.
E O E
"SCHOFIELD'S DAISY" 2-Horse Planter.
If your agent does not keep this, and yoxi want to know all about a planter that is up to date with good points and no bad features, write us.
GALE MFG. CO., Albion, Mich.
All kinds Plows. Huron. Cultlutou, Hakw »d Plinters,
1
John Potts
Has the Finest Line of
Oysters, Fish, Game,
Etc.. in the city.
Salt: Water Fish
A Specially. Don't fail to give him a call. 107 East Mar
iaW'n
