The ‘ ’ INSURANCE. REAL ESTATE AND LOAN AGENT The Life “Insurance companies off the United States carry iusumnw; upon over one million 11w x, umount- ‘ ing to upwards of one and 2; half billion dollars. ' D. M. BRSKINE, Jr K. It is relrtmhing to we a nmn whni has been made entirely by therist-i in the price of real (estate, lie around and gr uinblu at public inipruvenmntn. Some of these men acquired their property when it was chonp, and have hung to it through thick and thin until its value has been many times increased through the enter- prise of their neighbors. These men are always ready to reap the beneï¬ts of all public improvements, and dc~ cline to contribute anythingr toward them. They keep entirely out of all onterpriseir, and if they are suvcessâ€" in], they, quietly gobble their share, but if unsuccessful,wit around and any, “I told you so."â€"â€"Exchunge. Life Insurance as an investment. .-“I.h'a.ve no investment," remarked a gentleman of large means not 101ngr :ng, “that aï¬â€˜ords me more setisfac» tion or egreater sense of security from loss than in policy.“ I went dozen years ago life iiisumnCc 'nto insurance a thereabouts,’ mid it has been gi‘owi 1;; in my estimation ever since. I ave seen ï¬rst-class securities and stock crumble into ashes, but my insurance policy has been steedy and sure all of the time. My family have had that to depend, upon in theicon’tingency of my deuth,’ and it would not have failed them. My ï¬rst advice to a young men start- ing out in business would‘lm in favor of securing a. life insurance policy in i a. good, sound company, and sticking to it through thick and thin, paying ithepremiums promptly, even if he has Mfscrimp sometimes to do it. I have done it myself and can speak from exPerience, when I any that it pays. Seine months ago a. case came to my notice, fully sustaining the views I have expressed. Two young friends of mine commenced u prospenhis bllsincss undertaking in pnrtnership, and for six or seven years eycrything went on successfully. They made money and Wt‘l‘t‘ considered pros- perbus by all who had dvuhngs with them, ()ll(‘ of them “1‘ the outset took out a $3,000 policy in favor n: his wife, nnd pmd the premiums as they lN't'lllllt‘wfllll‘. It wusn't nlwnyu nu cosy thing, but he ‘did it. 'Hia assocmtc in business declined ll pol): cy, though frequently solicited to secure one. Of a sudden the ï¬lm's businesAeollapsed, ï¬nancially wreck» ing both men in partnership. ' Ad- of 1111* iriemu -Ted with111 a year run 1119.011": parlor 11.1111 I opened (11¢: uï¬tex tho foilure of 111011- !) 11101-111. 'dom 111111 11! 1111111111 the k1tchu1., 'll1a $11111†otgthe pump! w 0 Was He naked we 11 anybody else was ‘ S'RSK I NE J P. 1 111111111113 11118 providml with I su1ull'1mved and Imu I told [11111 that: was" N3URANCE.'b11t comfortable home, the result of no ï¬re, and hexuuslhuve been1lreum-{ 1TE AND LOAN 11612111111111 foresight. and providence The' iug. Well, p21 was astonished P211 fuu11ly of his associate was left penv' 1111311 be 111111 demonstrated that if 11' anus to struggle m Hm world thelmun in cool and cnflected‘m I case 011 J O U m' a? @111“ 11111110111 no") Jydtu'ge b â€Qua eWuw 111 1101“" MICK†BY “Insurance companies of? best way they could. 113“: experience 1 tire and goes deliberately at work to cOnveyed u lei-15011 which ought nevei save himself, he will come out all to be forgotten. The best business right."~l’wlu'u Milwauker'ï¬un. 111m fuil Death is cerpain Lifel ' , .- A \ insuram: eg'uuiuntees competence and Mrs. Josephmc Carter. " (‘omfur't for tlwsu who avail themâ€"l We were cullud upon very rvcently solves of its PFUVIHUUB- . ltu record the (ii-1101 «1f M131; Alice: “ You see,†said the bud boy, “since; there has l)(‘t:ll so mnny tires pu has got u\\ful scared, and he has bought three lire csuuprb‘, nuule out of ropei with knots in them, and he hus been telling us every day how he could } rescue the whole funiily '11 case of: tire. He told us to be c 01, whatever“. happened, him. If the‘ house got on fire we were all to rush ‘ to punund he would save us. “'oll,l last night ma. bind to go to onevof the neighbors, where they was going to lnive twins. Pa suys’there ought to ‘ ‘be a law that babies should arrive3 on the regular day trains, and iioti wait for the midnight express. \Vell,†pa he got to sleep and he slept till about 8' o’clock in the morning and the blinds were closed, and it was) dark in his room, and I had wuited for my breakfast till I was hungry as a wolf, and the girl told me to wake pu up, so I went up stairs, and I don’t know what made me thinknof it, but I ligï¬ome'of this powder they make red ï¬re with in the theatre, that me and my (Ehum had the Fourth V of July, and 1 put ‘in u wushjdish in p the bath-room and touched it of? and hollomd'ï¬re. ‘ ' “ I‘vus going in wake palm up and tell him it was all right, and hmgh'ht him. I guess there was too much ï¬re or I yelled mo'l oud, cause pa jumped out of bed and grasped n, rope and rushed through the. ball m the buck window, that goes 011 u. shed. I tried to tiny something; but pu. run over me and told me to save linyuelf, and I got, to thewbnck window to tell him there my! no ï¬re just as lie Iâ€, himstlf out. of the window. He lnul one end of the rape tied to â€10 log 35! the wmlmtand. mid he was; climbing down the back side of llu; shod by the hitclumfmd' 1:6 mm the lmrrihlent looking object m: was will; his legs flyiiig nmlitryiiig to stick his nails intg'flm (rope and “HM. Hillvof (ha house. I dnn't, think a. 1mm lpoks well in Hot-wry with UN- cluthvu pu had on. I did‘u't blame thv hirt-(l girls for being: ROIH‘G‘d'WJH‘JJ tho-y Nuw pa and Ink h-gu ('ume tluw‘h nutsnh- the ’vumluw, nml Whvh they yulh-dI \u-nl down to the knvhmi, and they said n'cruy 1mm \wifln a pullow-cnsq around Ina neck was» try‘ The _Bad Boy’s Talc. house. I (lulyl't, thini a. well in Hot-wry with Hu- hm] on. I didn't blame iiug. Well, pa was astonished. Pal A moment 1111111: 111111 Highland 5511311111: 11111-1 deluunstriited, that if atl’urk was rcuchrd, 11ml "()h," 1111M lmun in cool and cnl‘ecied‘l‘n 1 68.880! the, ““‘liï¬'t 1i préll)’ plnm- 'thfx is." 11in: 11nd goes (lvliln-rutely at work tof‘Ixu’t 11,. Ilm’, my dear," said l11:. save himself, he will 1.101111: nut ulll“Y1:.~1, it’s 1111.1. li-câ€"nâ€"u-t irf 11-l. I ‘I‘igl1l."~1’€£k'u Milwauker: Sun. wonder wlmt plum: it 01111 hr '9" (“1111 , .- V we felt'iutoreutcd 111111 began 11» 1:11- 1 Mrs. Josephme Carter. " 11111111, 11.1111 confess lelt sniucwhul 1 We were cullml 11pm) \erv11061111v:'{111ul1led lest our scut,ultl10ugl1 we in: rccmd the 1l1-111l1 11f M11111 Him. hml olmnuqd 11 “lmlc ulie,\\<111ll lAllt 11, and now to make u. Hlulllfll 1111111 1111151111111 to contain- ' \Vy lliri<f tribute to the m1 mun of her “(11: 011 the point of t11111i11-i11r1111111l siwtu. Mm.('urte1 “lm (liul at her 111111 f11111isl1i11u 1111111 the infuuuu- ;l101.ue in Highland l’mk Oct. 1, 1883.1ti11u for which they seemed 1-111 1111);- The family circle thus visited with ibureuvements in rapid succeminu, llmve the earnest sympathy of the whole community, and have need of ï¬rm trust in the faithfulness of our common Father when he assures us that he “ doth not willingly nfliict.†As in the case of the younger sister, the surviving friends" must look back upon the life of Mrs. Carter with great satisfaction when they reigember her uniform mniabilâ€" lity of disposition, "her consistent Christian character from (curly life, her patient devotion to her family duties and her ardent attachment to all her friends. In .her eglucatidn, added to the devotion of a pious and faithful mother, she had the good fortuhe to enjoylhe instructions of that reï¬ned Fseholar andC hristfan gentlemm1,Rev Mr. I Montawue, of Allen H (now \Viï¬consin. D"But 11101 e than “1113,3116 was a docile learner at the feet of the Great Teucheh. whose goml pleasure it hath beeuto call her to 11 higher place prepared for her in His .presenee. / 1 ‘ S. 011,151“; this 3 Pretty P13111311 The following is 11 11311111113111 11â€" port of an intelesting'1:1111ve1s11111111 whi1:h took place 111111110 111 the fast trains bound for Chicago, a few days , “go. “It, the “1:1111v111‘s11t1'1111, not 1110' (min, was being 1:1'1111111c111A by an 'eldquy gentleman 111111 his partner in 1111:, “1111,10 111w attentive cur, sounded 1111â€" woxds ï¬lly 11111111111 "1‘111- 15111111111I were 01111111111) atxungurn 111 111111 part 1 ‘9! the cmmhry. hailing 11111111111119] fmm 11011511, 111111211, in \\ 11111111111111. 11111111111»:I seemed 111 nwnko 11 t111ir 1111111'-,1H1 1 however as 1111111111111 nwif11y Mung 1’ 11111.11 11131111111111 “ms r11ta,u111111 “1111111 1111111 1m111ms111111 14117.11 111111111111111111 w1mt1hay 011111.111 "(111111011ea “1111111111 preachers, 11111111111111411'1111 1111 11111111511 Hwy were "1n1-r11v1111‘u1 :L’ho train {m‘tunntely runhedl ""’""_‘"""""" â€T'm‘l Mm. J. S, Kuist returned {rum :1 muons“). Nothmg viuit lllH“WH‘k. n â€WI†inmn-HLI Mrs. “"- H. \Vlhnnt, in pinning; «h- nwiftly nhnug.â€riv-ndn nlmm Kunknkvv uml ix 1m! M ““51"“, when wxpoolm] hunu' tiH m-xt wrel}. gaze Jim‘uwrml' M F» A- Dow. “"f' “‘1â€. "f V"" ‘hnrchea without ; mum, 15mm m J t‘.’ th her pmvnts . 5mm. Mrnv D'H‘H-IHIH IIH‘ mum-I'- "m httlv “rp’ul'ullwollu and will lw H mm in Hmir rur- Ldml welvumt‘, ». , \- .1 Hits.†thruu‘fl 0.“ such quiok' lunr Hmt the) '{u}t]11:i‘lxntyl'v saw (rm-s whirl; they tgok m be we}: wnlk'mg, thus lepving uyou their xmudb u tolerubly gpod impression of our would-bu anuexod suburb. ‘ Increasinglmsinchsut the bm'lwr M51101) has uecusuimtmL ndditiunul $11011) Two ï¬rst class artists now imam the chairs. Largo, fortunes, as u rule, urc acquired through judicious invest- ments in real estate. This fut't shouldnbe borne in mind. If you are uncertain ms [u II‘IH‘T4‘ to inwst, you may get infmnmtion by culling at this ofï¬ce. Deerï¬tdd “is not dvml", nor dun]; She H1861). Our business mm um alive to their interests and kegp lzu‘gt: stocks 0f goods. Mr. Antea has his ice house and cooling room adjoining tho now meat market nearly completed. It is of the Fisher patent and M). ‘Finhur gives his personal ntteinion to Lh‘: work. 1 Mr. (Todd’s .new house is partly roofed and will (lnubtlms be can» pletedcre long. ‘ The HoJcomh bridge just, west Hi the villugein tn be mplucml by u mew (mo, work having already Inwnmunh mama-(l by the cnmmctm', Thu“. Yorv; '11) insure ugmnnt, neitidvntu it, will be. 16 fcet'ju width, Mr. J. Alums and wifu h'uvu rum- thé plenumâ€, suit of rmmm 0w Bm-k’u lmrmms slurp. Deerï¬eld Doings. “ MnnR'ANzgri."