Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 20 May 1893 — Page 7

NERVOUS DEBILITY

cured by the use of

AVER'S Sarsaparilla

Tones the system, makes the weak, strong.

Cures Others

will cure you.

A Planters Experience.

"My plantation is in a malarial dta« trict, where fever and ague prevailed. 1 employ 150 hands frequently half of them were Nick. I was nearly discouraged when 1 began the uao of

The result waa marvellous. My men became strong and hearty, and I have had no furtluir trouble. With these pilla, I would not fear to live in any swamp." E. K1YAL, Bayou Sara, La.

Sold. Everywhere.

Office, 140 to 144 Washington St., N. Y.

JTTLE

Elck Headache and relieve all tbc troubles iuci" dent to a bilious statu ol the Bystom. Euoii a? Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsineaa, Distress ai'U'." eating. Pain in the Sida, .l-o. Whilo their mw remarkable success lias been shown iu curLx^

Headache, yot Garter's Litilo Liver PV' equallyvaluableiuConslipalion,curij)( n::d yrr Venting this annoying complaint, while thev tlr correct all disorders of tlie .•toinacli.iuiniulnt.t liver and reguluto the br.v.'olg. E vc-s ii they CBre1

W

Aclifi they would beahuoatyrlceless to tTto'sn T' enter from tiisdiiitr! hi.'iiaicoor.)p! ii^t birtfo-i' llfltoly their goodueyB ocn hoteil'I hcr-v -j C\h i**• TTho once try them will find these littjepttfc-«l vable in so many way a that thoy will'not be vZ-iT is to it S a

lie

the bane of so many livea that hero IS T. V.'itremakeourgreatbonst. Ouriiiihieuroit»ni If Others do not.

Carter's Little Liver Pilla aro very mull :u,l. Tory easy to take. One or two ]iUs :r.alrp.a They ore strictly vegetablo and do not prii. purge, but by their gentio action plea-so a.: I nee them. In vials pt 25 cunts li^-o for J.I. won... by druggists

everywhere, or sen by maiL

CARTER MEDICiNE CO., New York.

WALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PiiK'1

FO

lrai.„rat,:

iM SO

nhaosted by th*.t I uul not do anv wortf. The sn- i:.)panviji~ iv/,ortfi ihw ih?re*ufc

and palniar* nil My art

itirprwcri.

Witl

Before. Alter. Lois.

«tniunthfi1

Lrcr.u

nu*nt. I ro*v feel Vo r. tv'nfr. III?

Weight iUf. lbs 195 lbs 50 lba Rus'.,..., 4S in. in. 11 in, V»*aiit... 4\ in. 59 in. 11 io. Hips.... £7 in. 48 in. 9 in.

dieerf.illy n»ply ic inquiries with 3tooip inclosed."

PATIENTS, TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL Ksrmleei. No Plsirvis^, Scrui 0 cents in stacitit for particular* to

OR- 0. V. F. SHYDEB. MVICKEK'S THEATER, CHICASO, IU

V.nTNJ Until aflT fn.i CS.W.

uf^tlPiSHp

lr th-ni in w.'i t'-olni troid.

:i,

ii a aiiK-cil lor ye:i! lic.varoo imitation-.. i\ THIS OUT. son" your full nan,i and address, an this watch will be sent to your n"arost evpn-ss oflioo. Vcm can examine it am' i' satisfactory

YFT^MTGGAAAGAHR,..-- PAV TIV »XIR.VS agent $15 GO with kiRS i|

ie

understand­

ing il you can buy this same grade elsewhen* for less than $38.00 your money will be refunded. If you will forward cash $15.50 direct with your order, we will send you FKEE a warrrnted 10-year sold chain. Price for chain, 81.r0.separate. Itefer you to banks and wholesale jewellers Both Ladles' and Gent's sizes.

C. W. EASTWOOD,

Bort Building, 17-19-21 Quincy Street. Chicaqo, 11

DO YOU

JuresColds,Coughs,Sore Throat,Croup,Influcn *a,Whooping Cough,Bronchitis AND Asthma, A C.-R

Uin cure fur

Consumption

in

iu first su»gea, and a nure rulie

advanced stag-ea.

Use at oace.

You will see tho

excellent effect after taking the first dose.

Sold

bj dealer# ever/where. Lar^e bottle*. 50 ceau uad $1.00.

tolai-y arid expenses paid weekly from start. Permanent position. Good chanoe for advancement. Exclusive territory. Largest growers of Noraoryatoclc^ Clean, nardy etock, true to name. Fair treatment trua^^ anteed. Liberal oommission to local part tlrn. acents.

•We I

can ii-|

tercst any

one not earn-ll

lag »75 per month and expenses. Don't hesitate because of pre-1 vions failures in this or ofl lines. Outfit free. Address,

r.

BEOWN BEOS. CO.,

Continental Nurseries, Chicago. Hl.\l 9 house is reliable. Name this paper.—Ed.)

OYER THE STATE.

Late Telegrams from Various Cities and. Towns.

Itelfirn of Terror Imminent. ^ALPAKAISO, Ind., AI sty 15.— About 11 o'clo(!k Sunday morning', while the streets were thronged with people, one of a party of about twenty-five Italians employed on the Fort Wayne railroad here became engaged in an altercation with Sanfred Sowers, which speedily developed into a general figh*. The foreigners were armed "with knives, clubs and stilettos, and Sowers had a narrow escape from death at their hands. Hundreds of citizens joined in the fray. Sheriff Stoddard and a posse of officers, after a severe struggle, succeeded in locking up Sowers and five of the Italians. The foreigners are profuse in their threats and a veritable reign of terror seetns imminent.

Old 1'ostal Force Must He Retained."' TKRKK HAUTE, Ind., May 15.—Mr. Donham was fully installed as postmaster Saturday night, lie had been in partial possession tor two days. His frieinls believe that the letter carriers appointed by him are legally entitled to the positions because their appointment was prior to the first civil service examination in this office, which was held Saturday. This view of the law is based on Attorney General Olney's opinion regarding the extension of the law by President Harrison to all free-delivery offices. It is a disputed legal question and a test case will probably be made. In the meantime the old force will remain, in accordance with telegraphic orders from Washington.

Arrested for Forgery.

COLUMBUS, Ind., May 15.—BenSering, a young traveling man from Madison, arrived in this city Thursday and registered at the Belvedere hotel. Upon asking if any mail had arrived for him he was given a letter, which he opened in the presence of Landlord Johnson. It contained a check on the Madison national bank for §35, signed by Sering's father, an ex-banker of Madison. The landlord cashed the check, but when he sent it to Madison for collection it was pronounced a forgery. Sering's father ^refused to make the amount good, and the forger was arrested Saturday at Indianapolis, where he was going under an assumed name.

Shootinff Affray in Terre Haute. '.} TKKHK 11 A n-:, !nd., May 15.—August von der Einbse was shot Sunday by James Maheiv because he insisted on, calling on Matter's sister, who had been deceived into a mock marriage with him. When Maher learned a few months ago of the deception lie brought his sister here from Chicago. Von der Einbse had been warned not to come to the house, and when he appeared Sunday Mali ingot his shotgun and tired. Von der Embse was hit in the arm and leg and badly wounded, perhaps maiming hiin for life. v.

Farewell Day.

TxniA.NAPOLIS. Ind.. May 15.—Sunday was a day of farewells by the 800 Y. M. C. A. delegates to the International convention. Meetings were held at all the churches three times during the day and two were held at Totnlinson hall, the last being at night. L. W. Munhall made the principal address and ex-Postmaster General Wanamaker responded to repeated calls from the audience. Most of the delegates left for their homes by the midnight rains.

A Mill Contort*?*!.

COLUMBUS, Ind., May 15.—The last will and testament of the late Mrs. Bernard Klier, of this city, was probated in, the circuit court Saturday. Her estate was deeded as follows: Helen A. Buck, of Xaiberne, Seigen. Prussia Wilhelm Bullenback, of Hilchenback, Seigen, Prussia, equal parts, it consists of C00 acres of land and is valued at about $50,000. A protest to the will was tiled by Jlrs. Minnie Holland. She alleges that Mrs. Klier was of unsound mind.

Burglars l.oot a Railroad Office. WABASH, Ind., May 15.—The ticket office of the Lake Erie & Western at Rocester was entered by burglars Saturday night and $8:-J taken. The burglars, who are presumed to be residents of the town, crawled through a window and carried off a tin box in whicli the currency was kept.

Sent Tramps to the Penitentiary. GBKKXCASTLK, Ind., May 15. Six tramps who were terrorizing the citizens of South Greencastle and breaking into houses in broad daylight were jailed Saturday and there is evidence enough against them to send all to the penitentiary. Three were sent over the road last week.

Damages from Parents.

WABASH,

Ind., May 15.—Mrs. Lizzie

Railsback, wife of a prosperous young farmer, Saturday night in the Fulton county court was awarded §500 damages in her suit against Nathan and Mary Railsback her husband's parents, lor the alienation of his affections.

Dcutli ol" Dr. JK. A. Armstrong. KOKOMO, Ind., May 15. I)r. E. A. Armstrong, the oldest practicing physician and one of the wealthiest residents of this city, died suddenly Saturday of apoplexy, aged 00, leaving an estate of 8150,000 and no family. Six brothers get the property.

fj Accused of Passing Counterfeits. T*

••-'VIXCKXNKS,

Ind., May 15.—United

States Deputy Marshal S. P. Jones arrested A. .1. Johnson Sunday night on a charge of passing counterfeit money. The prisoner was taken to Indianapolis for trial. Johnson is a local detective.

Appointed a I.ady I'hysiciaii. JXDIAXAI'OLIS, 1ml., May 15. Dr. Mary Spink, of this city, has been appointed a member of the state board of charities by the governor to succeed .Mrs. C. W. Fairbanks.

Crushed to .Death.,

WABASH.

Ind., May 15.—William

Pence, an old resident of the north of this county and quite wealthy, was fatally crushed in a sawmill yard in Koun Saturday nisrht

£53

HAUNTED STATUES.

Andeut Egyptians Believed That Image! Were Animated by Spirits. When Darius I., according to Herodotus, wished to erect his statue near that of Rameses II. (Sesostris), the priests objected on the ground that Sesostris was1 a greater conqueror than he. The statue in question was one of several erected before the temple of Pt-ah at Memphis, on the borders of the sacred lake, where is now the village of Bedresliein. After Memphis became Christian the renown of its monuments died away, and when it perished the stones were removed to serve in building Cairo. One colossus remained to our day, it having been preserved under the sand, and on being unearthed by Caviglia at the beginning of the century was found to represent Sesostris in his youth.

This colossus has been visited by most tourists in Egypt, says the London Globe. It lay on the sands near the plain of Bedreshein, in a hollow or ditch, and was Covered with water during the inundation. The remains of the temple might be traced along the lake, which is still represented by a depression in the ground covered with wheat fields. Of late years Gen. Stephenson and Ma.j. Bagnold. R. E.. have excluded the waters from the colossus, raised it on timber supports above the ground and surrounded it by a brick wall. On payment of two piasters, however, it can be seen by the curious.

M. Maspero, the great Egyptologist, relates in a French contemporary that the Arabs had formerly a great awe of this, which they called Abou'l llol, the "father of fright," as they do 'the sphinx. The ancient Egyptians, he assures us, believed that statues, divine or human, were animated by a spirit or 'double" detached from the soul of the person they .represented. This double ate, drank, and spoke or delivered oracles. In later times the double was credited with playing evil tricks on those who approached the statue, and even with killing them. Ilis power could be destroyed by breaking the statue, or at least the features hence it is that so many statues of the Pharoahs have been mutilated by the Arabs.

The spirit of Iiameses II. was supposed to haunt the palms at night, and M. Maspero relates that every time he passed by in the. evening toward dusk the driver of his ass would mutter his prayers and hurry on his beast. One evening M. Maspero asked him if he was afraid of some "afaite" and the driver begged him not to speak of such things or some harm would befall him. Presently M. Maspero was thrown from the ass in the middle of the wood and the incident was regarded by the driver as a punishment for his not speaking respectfully of the spirit in the statue. Egypt is full of such superstitions, dating from the far past.

WHY JENNY LINO RETIRED.

An Intimate Friend of the Singer Gives the True Reason. One matter which must be of interest to every lover of dramatic art, and which has been an enigma to many people, is now for the first time dealt with by one with authority to discuss the question, says a writer in the Century. Why did Jenny Lind quit the stage at the moment of her greatest glory, and many years before her uurivaled powers had begun to suffer any1 decay? Some have perhaps reluctantly accepted the widely-prevalent idea that she had come to regard the dramatic profession as an unholy thing which no pure-souled woman could remain in without contamination. Happily this notion can be entertained no longer. Her intimate friend, Froken von Stedinglt. with reference to it says: "Many suppose this resolution to be the result of pietism. Jenny Lind is as God-fear-ing as she is pure, but had pietism been the cause, she would not herself have gone to the play, which she declared she liked to do, to see others act." The fact is that to appreciate her motive for leaving the stage is to understand the whole character of the woman. Her distaste for it seems to have begun with her first great European success and steadily grew as her fame spread. In 1840 she had lived for ten years a life of incessant hard work on the stage yet in the following year she wrote from Paris: "Life on the stage has in it! something so fascinating that 1 think,! having once tasted it, one can never feel truly happy away from it." But in 1S45, just after her transcendent sue-: cess in Berlin, the idea of leaving thej stage had not merely occurred to her mind, but had already become a. fixed determination. Among the dominant notes of her character were love oi home and craving for domestic peace. This craving was to a great extent satisfied while she remained in Stockholm, and especially during the time she lived with the Lindblad family. But when her destiny drew her in relentless triumph lo Berlin,Vienna, Copenhagen. London, licr domestic instincts were wrenched and tortured, and she found no compensation in all the glitter of her success. "I am convinced," said

Jlerr 'Brockliaus, in April, 1840, "that she would gladly exchange all her triumphs for simple homely happiness." That

5

the secret of the whole mat­

ter: And so she formed the resolution to quit the stage forever, a resolution in which she never wavered from 1845, when it first took definite shape, till she carried it out in London in the summer of 18-19.

Natural History an a Trarujuillr/.er. "A patient of Sir William Gull told me," says a writer in Temple Bar, "that his physician had recommended him to take up natural history as a tranquillizing study. The question arises, are the men who pursue these studies fnore free from strife, jealousies and all uncharitabieness, than those who arc struggling'for supremacy in art and literature? Judging from the naturalists I have known, I am inclined to think that, as a rule, they are more tranquilminded. Kingsley felt the truth of this when he said: 'Ere I grow too old, I trust to be able to throw away all pursuits save natural history, and die with my mind full of God's facts, instead of men's lies/" iw?ll, ...

van. i-v .-v

Bogus!

Bogus white leaa would have no sale did it not

afford makers a larger profit than Strictly Pure White Lead. The wise man is never persuaded to buy paint that is said to be "just as good or better than

Strictly Pure White Lead

The market is flooded with spurious white leads. The following analyses, made by eminent chemists, of two of these misleading brands show the exact proportion of genuine white lead they contain:

Misleading Brand

"Standard Lead Co. Strictly Pure White Lead. St. Louis." Materials Proportions Analyzed by Barytcs 59.3G per cent. Kcgis Clmuvenct Oxiile of Zinc 34.18 per cent. & Bro., White Lead C.-1G pot cent. St. Louis.

Less than 7 per cent, white lead. Misleading Brand Pacific Warranted Pure [A] White Lead." Materials Proportions Analyzed by Sulphate of Lead 4.18 per cent. Ledoux & Co., Oxide of Zinc 45.04 per cent. New York. Barytes 50.08 per cent.

No white lead in it. You can avoid bogus lead by purchasing any of the following brands. They are manufactured by the Old Dutch" process, and are the standards: "Armstrong & McKelvy" "Beymer-Bauman" "Eckstein" "Fahnestock" "Anchor" "Kentucky" "Morley" "Southern" "Shipman" "Red Seal" "Collier" "Davis-Chambers"

For sate by the most reliable dealers in paints everywhere. If you are going to paint, it will pay you to send to us for a book containing information that may save you many a dollar it will only cost you a postal card to do so. f,-

NATIONAL LEAD CO.,

1 Broadway, New York.

Cincinnati Branch, .' Cincinnati, Ohio.

A Federal Official "With a Pedigree. Josiali Quincy, assistant secretary of state at Washington, is the sixth of that name to become fairyOus. The founder of the family came io Massachusetts in 1633, and ever)' generation of the Quincys since that time has produced at least pne distin- :. guished inan. Tlie first noted osilili' ..Quincy was' an early friend of

4^

•. .• Atree TrtiMifo-rXcni* i'l. A

Wo will send any reader of this notico. who will write and ask for it NOW. a trial package of our Heart Cure Tabules,' which have cured thousands ol the various forms of heart trouble, dyspepsia, with palpitat-! mc and constriction, rheumatism, stiffness of joints, Fluttering pulse, dropsy, biliousness, etc. Write for trial package, or ifsuffering from any diseasesend symptoms,: Address, TAHUI.ES MEDICINE CO., South Bend, Ind. Our remedies for nervousness' and consumption are becoming very popu. lar. 1

ii How's our Complexion?

(V

E

I

Most toilet preparations ruin the face. Rozodorodoes i.ot. It is guaranteed to re-i move frockles, tan. sunburn and blotches of all lunds, leaving the face a natural white, nnd imparting a youth I ul de!icac,v and soft, tiess to the skin. Thousands. ofj ladses have used it for years and would notj be without it. If there is no an on 1.111 your' locality, send 75 cts. to the Rozqdoro Co., South Bend, Ind., for a larec bottle sent in! plain A'ruDpea. Aijents wanted.

No matter how many hundred doses of any o'Aer medicine lire offered for a dollar, Dr Pierce's Goldfen Medical Discovery is the cheapest blood purifier sold, through druggists, because it's guarantee'!, ami your monev is returned 'f it doisn't be lefit or cure

With its use you only pay for the good you get, Can you a,sk more* ......

They Never Fall

J. N, Harris, 3 Pulton Market, New York City, sr.vs: "I have been using Hrandr th'.s Pills for 'heiast fifteen years. There is nothing equal to theni as Blood Purifiers and Liver Regulators. But I wish to siate how remarkably they cure rheumati-m, and how easily: I was affected b,v rheumatism 111 the legs. My business (wholesale fish dealer) naturally leads rne to damp places I could not. wall and at night. I suffered fearfully 1 tried .JalsHins, Sarsaparil'as, and all kinds of tiiKtures, but thev did me no good and I was afraid of beini? a cripple. 1 finally commenced using Brandreth's Pills. I took two every night for ten nights, then I began to improve. I continued taking them for forty days and 1 pot entirely well. Now, whenever sick, I take Brandreth's Pills. Thev never f-ii

Children Cry for

Pitcher's Castoria/

Low Kates to the World's Fair.

Cotnueocing April 25t.h, World's Fair Excursion Tickets to (Jtiicago will he on sale at all ticket, offices of tiie Big Four Route. Liberal reductions in fare vvi 11 be mand and sale of tickets will cot tinu"dail until Go ober :i0t.h, inclusive. Return coupons will tie good until November 5th. Remember the BIK Four Route is the only iiue lauding passengers directly at the Entrance Gate to the Exposition Grounds, avoidintr the disagreeable transfer across the crowded c.ty necessary via o*,her lines. Ladies and children will lind the advantages of the Big Four Route specially adupted to their wants, aud everybody should be sure their tickets read via the Big Four Route. The local agent of the Big Four Route will be able to furnish you valuable information regarding the trip and a'so as to accommodations in Chicago. It will be to your advantage to see him be fore completing arrangements for your trip. Call on or a'idrr.R.

G.E.ROBINSON,

Agent Big Four Route, (Jrawfordsville.

J,

//.

J'lt won't

Send for Alabnstine Rock for Souvenir, Free also Tint Card.

Mention tliis

a",«i

Sale

of

Mens Suits worth $l(i 15

A

StLft5

Fi'-ank-

lin. His son Josiah was one of the great mcjn of his time, foresee-

V.LTI JOSIAH QUINIJY. ing early the necessity of the separation from England. The third Josiali, son of the second, horn in 177~, was t-hp,first mayor of Boston and was president of Harvard from 1829 to 1S45. The fourth Josiah, born in 1802, was also mayor of Boston. The fifth, Josiah Phillips Quincy, who was born in 182!) atid gall lives in Boston, having a country liome at Quincy, Mass.,' is the father of 'tli? new assistant secretary. His soni the' present Josiah, was born Oct. 15, 1809, and graduated from! Harvard in l£j§0..,v,

child's medicine.

1

TnF.norTOR.—

On their card.

paper.

A Grand Cheap

Everything goes at 70 cents on the dollar, At 211 East Main Street

for

Castoria relieves Teething Troubles. »ri. TtvT

i".

te.t \U V, viu ,,HW n't ,: Ic I 1 1 1 0 Ii

•i

Ca» oria cpres,,Constipation and Flatulency^!

Castoria Centralizes the effects of carbonic -Acid gas or poisonous air.

11 Castoria does hot contain jnorphine, opium, or other narcotio property.

Castoria .assimilates"the food, regnlates the stomach and bowels,

giving healthy'and ijatural sleep.

li' It) ft Ufir.ii itUz .ill!•ii 'j:ar| 11 Vr-i O0.1

Camtpria is putfrp iiyrtno-slge bottles only. It is not sold in .bulk.

Pon't allow any one to fe'ell yon anything else on the ploa or promise

that it is "just ^.s good and will answer. every pwrpose."

See that yon get C-A-S-T-O-R-I-A.'" 30 j-

The faorsimlle, signature of 1 iv 1 1 lt»U« ,. ., .A 1

Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.

fRXlB BY aiiurzi, 99

"Rock-City

If your Grocer or ilea|e# hami'tit Wagon 5IOO to 1800 WaUrilmitaft.

or hftun't it.-wrlto us for

a SKTCIDIO WV.One

POSITIVE

Finest Line of High Grade

EVEKTBODT

knoirs

that, wall paper, with lis Tegctalilo pastn and its colorings In

animal glne, Is unsanitary, and that to apply repeated layers of such Is a very "nasty practice," as well as dangerous. Kalsoinlne Is temporary, rots, rubs off and scales paint stops "wall respiration" needed to purify walls. Send tons for a paper from Michigan State Hoard of Health rc-

Oneiavcr port, on this subject, rco

hnvii'^hn'^'tH-nv^'Hahy Church's Alarecover 1.111 caiuuit. bastlno and plastlco only for mills of dwellings. Alahastlnn forms pure, permanent and porous coatings, ami does not require to lie taken off to renew from time lo time 5 is a dry ponder, ready for use ly adding water ttlio latest mako is used in COLD water anil Is never sold in bulk) can lie easily brushed on by any one made in white and wclvo fashlonal.io tints, and In three shades, from which ACV decorators make the balance of forty shades shown

K. B.—It is not claimed that all who llvo with.In papered walls die much beforo their time, but they will enjoy better health with wall coatings (l'l'l'l') Pure, Permanent, Porous and Pretty,.

For Sale by Paint dealers everywhere.

ALABASTINE CO., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.

Now is the time to buy Bargains.

'if

for $11.20 for 10.50

12 for 8.40 10 for 7.00 8 for 5.(50 t! for 4.20

1 f-

(•',

Mens Suite worth $5 for &3.60 Boys Suits worth 8 for 5.(50 7 for 4 5)0 (5 for 4.20 5 3 5 0 4 for 2.80

!ii

CHICAGO CLOTHING AND HAT STORE.

Infants Children

THIRTY years' observation of Caitoria with itho patronage of

millions of persons, permit us to «poa?£ of it vrithont guessing.

It iw unquestionably the tent remedy for Infants and Children

the world haa -or known. It in harmless. Children lihe it. It

gives them health, jit will save their lives. In it Mothers have

something which is absolutely safe and praotioaliy perfect as a

1

Castoria destroys Worms. 1

Castoria allays Tovorishnoss.

Castoria prevents vomiting Sonr Cord.

Castoria| cures Dforrhcoa and Wind Colic.

,, .-j

.UtU ''Otic

'f'*aj ,'f.

iMf '1. ("t u.'i t,d I 1

t.'.jiHii JUitf it/) t'sU ii

r(:

Price 60 eta.

Carriages and Phaetons

IN THE CITY..

Large Line of Farm Implements -Wind I'unijW'the Milwati-

kee Hmder, lightest running machine made.-

A Good Tongueless Cultivator for $10-00.

\'f

is on every

TgTaP"1'1'.

I*AXX.

POfifTAGB

Solid Axle Oil.

A pi»Mention will run your Ruray or

Adrir. AMERICAN SHAFT HOLDER C0.,WAIA»H, IND., A.

bATARf*

fST

!/"."• I 1" -1

c.

Houlehaii, Quillin & Co.1

t"

9