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Show PLYMOUTH POINTERS. More Knitd Mutters That Appear to Kaetl Looking After. The Plymouth people want a road across the Malad at a point about due west of the Hess post-olhi;e. post-olhi;e. They should lie given this road. It would be a great help to the farmers who are settled on the west side of the river. This country iB fast building up and the people should be favored as far as possible. The threshing Beano n is nearly over, The grain crop is large. So everyone is busy. Much dissatisfaction is eliown over the road from the river across the Hat to w a r d s N e v to n . A bee line across the Hat would be about three miles, but the way the road now crooks and turns it is said to be five miles long. The repeated changed, we are told by a gentleman gentle-man just down from there, keep the road rough and new. A straight, permanent highway ought to be established. The Willard boys have bundled their threshing machine oil- the Hat to do duty at home where its services were much needed. The roller flour mill and a railroad rail-road across the flat to carry off the out-put and the surplus grain raised around Plymouth are two great requisites to the future prosperity pros-perity of the place which the people should wortt in unity to secure. Hon. Frank J. Cannon spoke at Plymouth last week. We are reliably re-liably informed that seven worn-out threshres came out to hear him; one tired Republican and six sleepy Democrats, who dozed at every comma and snored aloud with prodigious satisfaction at every long period. |