Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 18 April 1891 — Page 6
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IM
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WHEN WE SAY
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in Prof. HarriV
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KOTPII
land A pue, Iudlsejllon, Hoc)cnche, nnd all' /Liver anil Stomach troubles. They Never Fail. Sold by ail drowrf'ts aud country *tor«J keepers. Holler* & Co., I'rop'#, HtUburgb,
Pa.
1? XT 'I-
IK rl
S
AND CATTLE
POWDERS
WV
F0UTZ
N' wilt d.e of COLIC. or I.vxo y*.
TR7.,
ll toiii.'.V I'o'.vilers nre :t (I in t'.me. I'or.r I'aw'l.'r-w.u.^ureanil nievent Moo CHOLERA. Fo:.l. I'OWfl.'H -A-1U prevent IN" FqWI.R. J-'out. 'owileis "MM Ini-ivn-e the oTintfv nf mills »tui c.- twenty cent., and ri..". .ne i/utter liru liwl
Ft'T I'owriers V:": pi—'TIT n!mr,-t EVERY 0l8KAbt to WiliCh nan :.t: e.ir-. luhlect. FOUTZ'K POWDKP.S A-iLi. siv* K».RI8PACI:oN. 6old everywhere 3AV1II E. FOUTS. Proprietor, 8AJ/rar»»K. uo.
LOCAL NEWS.
I Wavelnnri will have a home show on May '.ill!. Peru cnpitalist" will establish an oTemll factory.
Charlie Kiisiniiifier ami wife are home on a risit. The Miiall sou of Noah Myers is sick with
(.CO. M. Allen. of the Torre Haute Express,is seriously ill. CrawfordsTille's ureat liwrse show takes place to-iiajr. yuite a number of tramp* are doing time on tie stont£iiiu.
Mrs.
JOB
Havif«, ot Indianapolis, Bpent Sun-
liny IU Die city. 1 Surveyor W. jF. Hunt has been suffering with the grip this2nio*th. S The Eagle, moBtblj sciesce journal, is a
IHV venture at Fraukfort. joha B. Swank is workiuu fori). C. liaruhill in the undertaking business.
Work will begin om tho new unio* railwsty station at Terre'Haute next woek. The Crawfordsville Creamery ships fifty gal-
y6Ui Ions of butter milk to Iudiaiapohs daily.
Frank Nuckallsjis now superintendent of tho Slielbj ville electric light and water works. The graduating exercises of the Union township schosle will be held in the city «u May 9lh. I Franklin and SugarCreek township will hare no representatives in the declamation contest I to-day.
Wm. ReeVes and J. kl. Wangh, together with their wives spent Sunday in Ssgar Creek township.
Hou. Harry Francis has re-purchased the Michigan City Dispatch and will take pi sussion to-morrow.
The wife »f Elder Porter, the Baptist minister at Wayietown, died last Friday aad was buried on Wunday. llrs. George Fitchey and Mrs. Albert Mnhlei^en left Monday for a tw* months stay at Hot Spriugs, Ark.
Th.' divoreecase of Siphoua Peterman against dun ui E. lVicrioau has been c»Btinued until tne iifx' '—in ol court. iliiss Dora Hurk delightfully entertained a uumber of her friendB at her home iu the college campus last Thursday.
An attempted strike for higher wages than $1.10 tailed to materialize with the Vandalia section men at (ireeucastle.
Miss Cora Martin, who recently died in the Logaiasport hospital, was aged seyenteen, six feet in height and weighed 300 pounds. 'lab judge for the county declamation are S. E, Harw**"d. of Attica S. N. Cragin, of Lcuanoi', and 11. H. Osboin of this city.
A herd of 22 fine Holiteiu cattle was sold at auction in the Uiuk stables last Saturday. Tha cuttle found ready sale at frsia $50 to $100 psr head.*
AI I OHISI" Rrown, of this city, has been selected as editor of the Women's column of the L-l'oitt Ii.deoeniieut, the Farmer's Alliance paper of northern Indiana.
William Arnold, also known as Hampden,of Greencastle, has beea arrested, charged with an iiitampt to pass a check to which the name or Cal»in Alvin was forged.
The heirs of the lateDatid Houdabush are in the city to resist the collection of what they claim unjust taxation on property and money of the deceased. A lively suit will be the outcome.
S. P. Gray left for Covington Monday where he is working for Sam Reed iu his bank, He gets a handsome salary and will probably move his family there soon.—Waynetown Hornet.
Rev. G. P. Fuson returned from Effingham, III., last Saturday night in company with his si»u who has beeu confined for some time in the
IK
PARKER'S
HAIH BALSAM
3 uml the huir.
spital at that place, the result of a
railroad accident.
ll is rumored that a general strike of all the coal miners in the United States will take place ou May 1st. These strikeB are productive of little else save to raise the price of the article to the private consumer.
No person lias yet been choson to succeed Prof. John M. Coulter iu Wabash College, although ou effort will be made to secure Prof. Stanley Coulter, a brothei of J. M. Coulter, who is now at Purdue Uuiversity.
Daring the last few days the people have gotten a taste of duty free sugar. It is glorious. Everybody savs so, thon why not put the other necessaries of life on the free list also? Tins is demociatic doctrine all over.
The joint defondants in tho damage suit of Miss Alice Follick had their demurrer to tho complaint'argued iu the circuit court last Saturday, lipon the conclnsion Judge Suyder overrnled it allowing the complaint to stand.
Traveling Engineer Coburn, of the Motion road, states that ther# is not a road iu Indiana which has its power in better shape than the Mouon. Nearly every engine is new within the last two years or if old have beeu built within thatitiine.
Thomas CJ. Collins died at his home ou east Jefferseu street Saturday morning of consumption at the age of S4 years. The funeral occurrod fro» the Christiau church on Sunday afternoon, Elder J, C. Baruhill ollicia'ing. Interment at the Masonio cemetery.
The Snyder mills at YountsvilJe are at present undergoing many improvements. The new roller )process for the manufacture of flour is to take place of the old system, aud the mill is to be otherwise improved and when completed will be second to nono in the state.
7
•,
The democratic platform in the coming oily elec'.ionsjis a reduction of the enormous city tax^iF. Crawfordsville is a tax burdened city made so by republican misrule. Tho edict has gone forth for a change in inunicpal management and all persons, regardless of politics, should support the t!cket nominated by tho democracy last night. "The Wnnash College students adopted resolutions that were disgraceful in their inspiration. They seized on the peculiar occasion to reflect on President Tuttle. W:' i.-!, students have not given the college a c.ud name lately, and they are none the less lusponsible because they seek to make it appear that the rowdyiam is due to lack of| discipline.—Terre Haite Exi,re«i.
THE CRAW FORDS VILLE WEEK A' REVIEW.
Boom the 4th of July celebration. \V. ?. Molfett WrtS in Covington Monday. Miss Lucy Beck has returned borne from Colorado.
Anew Baptist ohnrch will soon be erected in this city. Mrs. Bub l'ettit is visiting relatives in Bloomingti'U, III.
The dog poisouer is getting in his work in great shape. Tom eiark spout Sunday with his host girl in 8oYington.
The Wabash ball team go«« to Bloomiugton this afternoon. Judge Fred F. White, of Rockville, was ill the city Monday.
Gen. M. P. Manson looked after his farm in White county this week. '4k Jerre Townsley isablo to be out again after a long and serious llines.*.
A Monon freight train killvd a brakeman near San Pierre lr.st Saturday. Sugar has advanced a garter of a cent on the pound duriu* the last week.
Every man on the democratic ticket Is pieced low taxes. Give them your Bupport. John Carrol has returned to Chattsuooga, Tenn., and Harry Snyder to Joplin, Mo.
Rev. C. I'. Stoekbarger and wife, of Haughville, visited J. A. McGlure anil family this week.
Mrs. M, C. Miller bnB gone to Knightstown to accept a,position in tho Soldiers' orphans. Home.
W. H. Johnston, J. B. Johnston and Miss
Martha
Johnston attended the funeral of an
aunt in Wabash last Monday. Pref. Charles Beechler, our young geologist, is an applicant for the chair of geology soon to be vacated by Prof. J. M. Coulter.
Nelson Durham has leceived nn increase of pensiou of $5 per laonth, and will draw back pay for six years.—Darlington Echo.
Elmer Swit/.er, orOtterhein, superintended tha process of dehorning some fifty cattle ou the farm of Harry Harding last Monday.
Cy Booher, r.) has had the following notice p»sted ou his farm:—"No hunting on this farm without dog or gun,"—Darlington Echo.
Darwiu Vauscoyoe, died at his home southeast of the city Monday morning at the age of 24 years. Mr. Tanscoyoe has been confined to bis bed for five years.
Many persons who blowed $5 to see Bernhardt in Indianapolis this week are people who havent enough cash to stay the pangs of
hunger
when at home. Shane on tsih god
dess worship. Prof. Averill has begun the drill of bis coinpauy at «rawfordsville and will exhibit four Bights tho last weok in April. The people of that classic town will enjoy "Nadii."— Frankfort Cresent.
Mrs. Curtis Edwards died last Saturday night *t her residence in Mace after a protractod illness at the age of 70 yeara. The funeral took place from the Mace M. E. chnrch on Tuesday morning, Sov. H. M. Middleton o*i«iating. Mrs. Edwards was an estimable old lady and one of the pioneers of the country.
George Sears, the 8 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Sears, fell under a northbound Monon freight at Lafayette Sunday morning and lost both of his limbs. The accident happened about 7:30 a. m. and within fifty yards of his home at the corner of Fifth and Roinig streets. The lime will never come wh«n boys will heied such a warning as this. It is a daily occurence in this city to see boys stealing rides from the depots to the junction and it is annual occurence for one of their number to ho killed.
I)o€.'t«r« itad Charclies.
The Doctors of Now York City say Speer's Port Grape wine has proved to be pure, unadulterated, of a line tlavor, and tonis properties, and is unsurpassed for its restorative powers, and they prescribe it as a superior wine. Shurches use it for comnmnion.
The Senate of Arkansas has passed a bill to prohibit the giving of a mortgage on crops, either planted or prospective.
When I began usin Ely's Cream Balm iny catarrh was so bad I had headache the whole time and discharged a large amount of filthy matter. That has almost entirely disssppeared ami I have not had headache since.—J. H. Souimers, Stephuey, Conn.
Thirty years ago Jamos A. Bailey, the millionaire partner of the late P. T. Barniini, was a bell boy in a Cincinnati hutel.
We have sold Ely's ("ream Balm about three years, and have roccoinmended its use iu more than a hnndred special cases of catarrh. The nnaainious answer to our inquiries is, "It's tho best remedy that I have ever used." ()«r experienoe is, that where parties continued its use, it never fails to cure.—J. H. Moutgomeiy »%. Co., Druggists, Decerah, Iowa.
Union
faring.
county, Illinois, has several frog
•41'ruti** itticl Fruit Tr««'V
an ably written book and gives trusty information for all who grow fruit of any sort or kind. Stark Brou.'Niirserieo, I.oiusiauit, Mo., will send it free hi all Interested— iraege Sudd Farmer.
Buggies at oh,ion ,v l-'ishei's.
English Spavin l.inmient removes all Hard, S'ift, or ralloMsed lumps and lilemixhes from horses, blood spavins, cui'ln. splints, sweeney, ring-In ne, stiller, sprains, all swollen throats, coughs, etc. SI'.ve .v.'ii) by IIM of oi.e bottle. Warranted the most woinlei ful blemish i-'tire ever known. by I»r. E. Detehnn, druggist, Crawfotdsvilie
On. KENNEDY'S AVORITE REMEDY
Is the only po'lilv utire for Dyspasia. Cutistipauon. i.iver :i«l dney Diseases :i in! is rwoinHIPoded Ijy |ibTfii'ians when othvr tneijieiin's
rail.
'riiotisauds testily to its bavins gavod their Ijyes. To .Mothers ami Duuphters liiis proveil bles?i«^. fl bottle: lor All ealors. Dr.David Kennedy Coi porat'n,
Kemdout. New York.
The Ocean
lv&cers.
Tho Atlantic racing season has bepmi, and it has unusual interest this summer, from the fact that four great fire and smoke breathing contcsUuits will enter the lists. They aro respectively the Imnan line steamers City of Paris ami City of New York and tlio White Star liners Teutonic and Majestic. !r far the City of Paris, the Teutonic and the Majestic have made the voyage inside of six days—the City of Paris in .') days 19 hours and 13 minutes, the Teutonic in 5 days 19 hours and 5 minuto.s, the Majestic in 5 days 23 hours and 30 minutes. But early in the season th Paris met with tho accidcnt iu miiioeean which laid her np for repairs ar. put her out of the race last summer. Ou this account the record can hardly yet be considered settled. This summer will decide.
It requires an immense amount of coal to drive an ocean racer across the water, and tho swiftest steamers are usually laid up in winter when travel is light, to reappear in glory and a coat of fre^h paint in ettrly summer. Although the Teutonic, OH the single voyage mentioned, claimed to have made the best time yet shown by an ocean racer, her average time during sixteen voyages between Quee.nstown and Sandy Hook is not equal to that of tho City of NewYork. The average length of the Teutonic voyage is days hours and minutes, that of the New York, 1 hour and 10 minutes less than this.
Of course the ship captains will protest again that they are not racing, that it merely happens they start simultaneously—all the same the crack vessels of the rival lines will slide out of port just about the same hour each trip, remain in sight of one another most of the way and reach the opposite port within a few hours or minutes of each other, as the case may be. And their excited passengers will bet tremendously on which will win. So far as security for life is concerned, the public need only know that the swift ship is fully as safe as the slow one.
What will bo the next advance in the shortening of time between Europe and America? The trip will finally be made inside of four days the prophets ly. It may be. When in 1866 the Scotia crossed the Atlantic 8 daj's 2 horns and 48 minutes it was thought a feat almost too great to be achieved again quite as remarkable as the Teutonic's trip of 5 days 19 hours and 5 minutes. But the voyage has been shortened nearly two days and a quarter since then.
I jaws of God Better Thau None. Writing of finance in the New York Sun, Matthew Marshall says it is not laws themselves that affect tho trade and commerce of a country so much as the changing of these laws and the constant dread tliat they are shortly to be changed. It is not silver or anti-silver legislation, not tariff or free trade measures that do harm so much as the apprehension before the laws are passed.
Whatever the law is, in course of time business adapts itself to it and runs on smoothly as lefore. Whatever business could not be done under a given law would cease and the capital invested in it find other channels. W)iat the commercial world wants most of ail is stability—knowing what it can depend on in the immediate future. Tinkering of any kind is unsettling for the time.
Speaking of financial legislation in general Mr. Marshall says: When my Puritan ancestors settled Connecticut they wore unablo at first to a«ree UIHIII a form of government and tho mode of atiininisterinR it.. They therefore very wisely adopted a provisional resolution that the colony should obey the laws of God until it could devise better ones. 1 retain a Rood deal of their prejudice in this respcct. and I desire to see as liUlo as possiblo of legislation affecting business interests. Kxperience is a better teacher than theory, and the accumulated experience of centuries is more trustworthy than plausible novelties.
There were somo nice points of international law involved in the case of the rioters at New Orleans. If the men who were lynched were American citizen--and had renounced their allegiance to tho Italian government, then Italy had no right to demand reparation for their death. If, however, they were still citizens of their nat ive land, and Italy could seek redress, there were those who claimed she must seek it from the state of Louisiana and not from Hie United States. But the state of Louisiana is not an independent power. Italy must demand redress from the general government, and then the general government can take it out of Louisiana. 11 isdiscovered at length, however, that part of the Italians killed were registered voters, and the question concerning these will therefore he: .May Americans lynch their own fellow citizen1-.'
In the destructive lires in New York recently it was demonstrated, wlmt most people suspect, that the ordinary ornamental cast iron lire escape which meanders down the front of tall buildings in cities is almost useless. If the firo bursts out through tho windows those inside the house cannot reach the escape, and in any ise the iron becomes so hot tnat persons descending cannot cling to it or step upon it. Tho trne fire escape, as has been suggested, will be a tower apart from tho building, reached by iron balconies from tho building.
Gari-baldi, who liberated Italy, wu=j almost as bad a man as Parnell. Benjamin Franklin was a little bit gay so was Alexander Hamilton.
Newfoundland wants to come into tho be iiuno^bin ^n ^nni
United States and bo ono of us, eo thoy mouth
My. Bnt CrtTJ Bhc if She W.anta to? ?,ver?"
Tho Atchison Globe puts a great truth into tho following words: "There is nothing a man is so proud of as that is sound asleep in bed."
"New York," says 'Dr. Cliauncey M. D.'pew, "is the real capital of the United States. Men who rise above and outgrow the opportunity of their neighborhoods all come here. The intellectual forces of the republic aro likewise drawn by irresistible laws within our borders." Hm. llow about Chicago?
The telephone has at length reached its greatest triumph in the establishment of a long distance lino between Paris and London under the sea. French and British merchants and bankers can now converse with one another freely from their own offices. The telephone would be used even more extensively than it is if the royalty on it were not so high. When the patent ruus out, as it will after a while, farmers and ranchmen c^ui talk all over their estates by telephone.
Wherever a touch of warm weather has come to break the dreary cold, those who love beautiful homes are stirring the earth aud preparing for the flowers that bloom iu the springtime. But meanwhile, now is the time, too, to prepare for the flowers that bloom in the autumn. Particularly we want our yards and grounds to blaze with the beautiful queen of fall flowers BO in demand—the chrysanthemum. Roots of these must be set out in tho spring, an., then if they are wanted to bloom late in tho autumn and at Christmas time, the earliest buds must be pinched off and the flowers kept back until they are wanted.
Within a few weeks the embargo has been lifted from American beef cattle at the German port of Hamburg. Last spring, when the price of beef cattle was so low, this would have been a great boon to American stock raisers. But because prices were so low they became disgusted, and many of them sold their best cattle for a song and went out of the business. Now the port of Hamburg is open, prices aro on the up turn, but there aro fewer cattle by many thousands than there were when prices were so low. But that is how people are nearly always caught in this world. The German authorities are building magnificent abattoirs at Hamburg, and there is every prospect for a boom in tho American beef trade there. Immediately on their arrival the cattle are inspected by the German government veterinary surgeons, then driven to the abattoir and slanghtered.
The Southern Hoom.
During 1890 the vssessed valuo of property in the southern states increased $270,000,000, a record scarcely paralleled anywhere except iu the gold and silver region of the northwest. The number of additional national banks established was 10-1. Eight million bales of cotton were added by the south to the world's products in Di'JO, and it was worth over $400,000,000. Of this more than half a million bales were manufactured at home on the ground in southern mills.
The production of iron and steel kept pace with the increase in cotton. Some time since the newspaper. Public Opinion, offered three prizes for tho three best essays on the industrial prosperity of the south. It is interesting to know that two of tho prize papers were written by northern authors. All presented carefully considered views of tho present and possible industries of tho south, and its advantages as a field of development. Most of the writers believe, in truth, that in natural advantages of nearly every kind tlie south is much superior to the north, and only wants Untouch of the twin magicians, capital and labor, to wake into surpassing beauty and richness.
Among natural advantages possessed by the south are all facilities required for successful prosecution of both agriculture and manufacturing* The soil comprises ground for everything that grows, so diffuse aro mountain, upland and lowland over its surface. Its milu climate permits agricultural work in tho'open air months after all things aro ice locked in the north and west. It lias limitless water power, coal, limestone and metallic ores all upon the same ground. Few regions are so situated as to have both water power and fuel in immediate proximity, where nature lnus piacd them for man's con-vr-iiicnoe. Finally, the south adds to •ii'i these favoring circumstances seaports enough of her own from which to hip all her products not needed in the
United Sfcit.es. What has she to do, therefore, bnt to go iu and win? In tho midst of the general gratulation, however, the Nebraska State
[CARTERS
child
In Sir Charles Gavau Duffy's stingin letter in The Freeman's Journal on th interference of the clergy in Irish politics houses tiiisL-mguage, "Until all thi?i clerical interference is changed there is no more hope for the Irish cause than there is for a corpse on a dissecting table-"
ITTIE_
IVER
PILLS.
Jonrnal
.. CURE.
sends
from a region where people know what bursted boom.-! mean this note of warning:
It in not surprlsiin that, a ureal many of the
I mi cities founded by enterprising northern promoters in tho coal and iron beltof the south aro failing to roako any headway, to tho prooitnd sorrow of _Innocent peoplo who have incsted in high priced corner lots In t.Le3e futttro greats. Hie business of city making is ovenlono down there, that Is all. There arc still K!
Uo
mountains,
and tliero will
lhftn1rCKi,on'
of cvcry COfU
bllt lt vriU
£aft
or
bla8,t fnrntwo.
Tho man who
caauot le&Uzo that deserves to lose his money.
Rick Headache and rollovoaU tho trouble dent to a bilious etatoof tho system, nuoh aa DIZZIDOSB, Nausea, Drowsiueaa. Distress AFTER eating. Pain in the Bitlo, he. Whilo their zaoat gemark&blo BUCCOGB lias BOON sliowu iu CURING
SICK
feoaaacho, yet Carter's IitUo Liver Pins imj equally valuablo in Constipation, curing and pro. venting thtunnnoylnRcomplalnt, while tlie.y *1*, cerrect allUBorders of thos tomaeh,atimuhu.) tho liver and logulato the bowela. Evon H' they only
HEAD
Aelifithoy would bealmostprlcelossto thnoowha Buffer from this distressing complnint butfortujjately their goodness dooa notond boro.anil thogQ who onco try thorn will find theso little pills valu. able in BO many ways that thoy will not bo wiiiliDg to do without thorn. But after allsick head
ACHE
flflthobanoof so many Uvea that here fs whew we make our great boast. Our pills cure it iviiiio
Others do not. Carter's Littlo Uvcr Plllo aro very small and very easy to tako. One or two pills niakoa. They are strictly vogetablo and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action ploasoall ao ueethem. In vials at 25 cents iivofor 1. Sold by druggists everywhere, or sont by mail.
4CARTER
MEDICINE CO., New Yc
SMALLPILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL
PRICE
lonilipi 4 fentjp
118 EAfcT MA IX ^T.
(Successors to C.eorge Long & Co
We have a fine line of Sugar.
CCIM
Tobacco and Canned (ioods.
Come and Inspect Our Stock.
Farmers desiring to exchange produce lor Fresh, (irocurib anil al\vii\s at the
Uieii
Lowest Current Rates,
Should eall at our store ou_ Km,I .Market Street.
We have a good trade and expm to maintain it by fair treatment of all customers.
Toiiilonson & SeaM
PENNYROYAL WAFERS.
Prescription of a physician whn has had a life long- experience la treating female diseases, lsusd monthly with perfect success tj over 10,000 ladu s. Pleasant, safe, effectual. Ladies ask your (in: gist for Pennvroyal wafers intake no substitute, or inclose posage for sealed particulars. Soid all druggists, $1 per box. Ad-'.rfss
THE EUREKA CHE11ICAU CO., DETROIT, Jlici l-Oll ALK l$V i.f.w i'lSII i.R.
Drawings,
Specifica
tions, Applications for
Made By
Jiikek!
lpp.
Com II'"U.-
SURE CURE FOR CATARRH
FOR OVER FIFTY
YEARS
this old SovereignPiemedy has stood the test, and stands to-day the best known remedy for Catarrh, Cold in the Head and Headache. Persist in its use, md it will effect a cure, no matter of bow long standing the case may be.
For sale ly druggists.
LADIES
The rente ft known
lini-'c
Remedy. l'(
wherever used. Pleasant to use. injuriousor painful.
a
Doctors ust'i
Cures leucorrhre.'i or whites, ulecriUi'"1inllamination r.nd congestion "t u" womb, lalling ot tho womb, cancer all diseases peculiar to women. 1 home in your own oiivaev- -I"
l!'1^
treatment, $1.00. Sent prepaid, fryi*,rS'**r observation, on receipt.of price, i-en I circulars, l.adv agents wanted. AS'-''
LADIES' COMFORT MFG. CO. RICHMOND'!^-
ioolc's Cotton ^°ot O O N Loom nosed of Cotton H°ot ^'anJt,r JO
I'ennvroyal—a recent dtscoverv 'old physician. Is sMcwfuUU n,
monilitil—Safe. KfTeetual. Trice Vook' sealed. Ladies, ask your druggist tor
uUt
Cotton Hoot Compound and take no suo. or inclose 'i stamps for scaled partlcui'" dress t'O.Mi l.il.Y COMJ'ANY, Block, 131 Woodward avo., Detroit, Mltu
