Decatur Democrat, Volume 34, Number 46, Decatur, Adams County, 6 February 1891 — Page 5
t 'Highest of all ii)- Leavening Power. —U. S. Gov’t Report, Aug. 17, 18S9. * fMfel Baking fe.@. F &A. jas *%, .A-A alaSji M . ABaCOJ s £C¥ PORB
©he democrat — — ■ ' ------ X ■ Rates 0/ Stibseription. One Year, in advance JI 50 Six Mouths T 5 Four Months All subscriptions not pai-J during the year will be charged at the rate of A'.mi. Office in Democrat Btiildinir. «':ist side of Second Street—grotu'.d floor.: What a Country Girl May Do. [Owing to the b;d weather Miss Dora Peterson, who is teaching school in Union township, was unable to deliver her essay before the Farmer’s Institute last week, we herewith publish the same.—En Democrat.] A girl is not mere! v a dainty bit ot humanity to admire and flatter, not a pink and white toy to he tenderly cared for or ieit to perish, but a real live creatine with soul and intellect and with., a heart to feel and a st<?mach»td fill and a body to clothe, It may have been the original plan for them to be mere pnppe’s of lashion and useless altogether, but if so, the gjan has been reversed by a sort of disturbance in the social system, and many girls have'taken in the situation and have gone. to« work to care for themselves. There are girls everywhere, beautiful gir's, cliyrming, sociable girls, amiable girls, and reticent, moody, quiet girls.; modest, womanly girls and fast manish girls intelligent. useful girls, tender, loving, heart ed girls, blonde.girls with golden hair, and dark eyed girls who are fighting for their ‘places in the great world. Here is one listening to the click, click of the telegraphic apparatus, a heroine too, only need ing the opportunity to develop the greatness within her, which a time of trial will show, when she would d e at her past of duty. There is one.behind the-counter, taking lessons in human nature, with a wide r ;nge before her, limited only by the number of customers she serves. And there comes one from the factory, tired and worn, but she has a great warm heart for you inay see her giving pennies to little beggar girls for she remembers that she is a girl. There are numbers of girls in the school room patiently training the yourg in the way sos wisdom and Ikriowledge--They arc toiling with ti eneedle with weary brain and hand, catering to the demands of fashion's devotees. They are listening to the monotonous music of tl e typewriter in business oilices. In newspaper J offices with lingers soiled with type setting and pasting or growing dizzy deciphering the irregular marks and dots of shorthand reporters. They are everywhere. They cannot all be cooks, but all must be fed; they cannot all be servants, for some of them were not born to serve. The time is past when the mind and soul of woman tan be dwarfed until development is impossible. But these girls we . have been speaking of are, for most part, those living in cities and the smaller towns, and not a word of it reaches a class of girls who need assistance. They are the country girls, the daughters of poor parents who can hardly take care of themselves; girls who kel that they ought to work at something but have no earthly .thing to turn their hands to; for employment; they must wear old clothes because they cannot get new one-; they cannot.clerk because the cities are full of city girls who have had advantages
over them in experience; they cannot teach because the schools are already crowded with men and women; they can not manage a telegraph office bee-fuse they have had no chance to learn telegraphy; they cannot use a type-writer because they have never seen one; they cannot sew because there is no one to employ them; they cannot work in factories because they are over-crowded. But there are almost numberless things that an energetic country girl may. On account time we can aonly mention a few and with the success| that each one has had. . It is a matter of surprise that so few women attempt to earn a living by garden ing, because the work is both pleasant and profitable. There are many girls towhem a garden would be ot great assistance, foif possess a plat of land on which they can raise flowers and vegetables these i may be made to yield a good harvest. 3 Gardening is an Occupation particularly well adapted to women, and surely pre .sents many attractions to those wh’d are forced to depend upon the Of their own hands for subsistence, audit would be far more desirable than constant, sedentary employment, such as sewing. With the flowers early vegetables could, also be raised and sold to ad vantage. In England 1 there are already hundreds of women at i work in green houses and nurseries, and I they do all the grafting, budding and re ' potting of plants, with quite as much skill ' in the handling of them as the male opera- ■ lives possess. At the present time flowers are mor; sought- after than eves before, and if women would become more skilled in Horticulture they would soon find a largeJ field for their labors. The gains of women gard ners would be of mere account than those of and shop-girls, t Os . course there is work in it I have yet to see the occupation that pays which does ; not demand hea<i or hand labor. But the i work can be so arranged as to leave the 1 5- I o hottest hours of the day for leisure. Doubtless there are many young women who would find in the garden, not only the natural roses that bloom there,
but the ro -of health with which to adorn the’.r cheeks. A lew years ago a young girl who appeared t> be fat illy ill with consumption went to live with sone friends in the country, and amused [herself by playing with the children at making garden. In a little while she found the health giving properties of air and exercise, and gradu a'ly her lungs recovered. She gained flesh, and today she is a robust woman and declares that a spade was her doctor. She is one of the most successful gardeners in Ohio at the present time. Strawberries oiler another excellent avenue to monev-making. for girls. An acre of strawberries will yield from 1.200 to e,oot\ quarts. The yield will never be less and it is often much more. Ina fair -ea >n an acre strawberry farm will pay a net profit of from $l5O to $175 per acre. A 1.-.dy who lives in a home of luxury in Freeport,, Illinois, made a handsome fortune out of strawberries. She kept a man to work the farm, hired children to pick the berries and took orders from commission house and families herself, not disdaining. to deliver the berries trom her own carriage or wagon, both of which she han lied herself. Four years ago Miss Bel’e Clinton, of Nevada. Story county, northv.e-tern lowa., was a school teacher full of health, fiin and enterprise. She was tired of teaching school and concluded to do something t! at would bring more monev, and at tlte same time f irnish more scope for her powers, and what she did do can net b* better told than in her own straightforward v/ay: “I saved $l6O trom the money 1 earned teaching school, borrowed a span of horses ui father, rigged up a prairie schooner and started with my little brother for Dakota. I never had such a good tirne in my lite, or such an appetite, and everybody was p ilite and .pleasant to me. I received the utmost courtesy everywhere. Rough, rude men would come to our camp, and after I had talked to them awhile offer to build my lire and actually biing water to me. We went up thr\pgh the wheat country, which they call the Jim River country, 'lt is about one hundred ’ miles east from the Missouri Fort Sully. 1 homesteaded one hundred and sixty acres of land. Then I took up a timber claim of one hundred and sixty acces more, and with the help of a hired man set out ten acres of trees. This gavetme one hundred and sixty acres more’ so I have three hundred and twenty acres now. The trees were yourgdeebs, apple and black walnut >prog’s. I sowed a peck of locus beans, a pint of apple seeds and two bushels of black walnuts in our garden in lowa one year before. These sprouts'were little fellows and we could set them out just as fast as we could get them into the ground. I believe my little black walnut sprouts will be worth sls apiece in ten years and S2O apiece in fifteen years. Why locus trees will sometime fence fjie whole county, Next we built a shanty and broke up five acres of land, and in the fall we returned to lowa to spend the Winter. In the spring I’ll go back with more black walnut and locus sprouts and take up another claim of one hundred and sixty acres. The trees are just what I want to plant any wav, and they will pay better than any wheat crop that could be raised] only I must wait for them ten dr twelve vears: but l ean wait.’’
Miss Clinton is a girl of twenty years, ■ and in lief own right owns three.hundred | ar-d twenty acres of splendid 1 lack prairie now. and will OAvn ?n the spring Litir hu-i- I dred and eighty acres, every acre of which : will brimr five dollars within three years, : ancl ten dollars within five ye; rs and ■ twenty dollars in ten years. Iler black : walnut and locus trees will be worth as j much more. The prospect is that at thirty : years of age this young lady will be worth ■ twenty-five thousand dollars, the fruit of her own enterprise, labor and indomitable courage. What woman has done, woman may do, and Miss Clinton has positively i illustrated the saying, “That.where there’s a will there’s a wav.” There is also a great amount'pi money in eggs. s The bu-iness of egg production has a 'fixed place among the food industries of tie country. E/us are ahi aithv and nourishing substitilte ft r nit -at and are generally cheaper in proportion to their I nutritive qualities. The business df pool try raising is a snap And pleasant one, safe in a pecuniary way, because there is avert small amount of capital invested, and pleasant because it gives a woman, what ! she needs’, a healthy out-door exercise.. A ! compiler of,■ industrial .statistics has this to pav-concerning noultrv: “Every business that increases n itional . weathy. and promotes individual comfort’ ; and prosperity posseses an interest to the ■ philanthrophi j cointneiisufale toits import- ' ance. It is impracticable for census reports to fairly represent eve’-y industry- ■ Should it be done in the simple matter of : poultry and eggs, the figures would astoa- ' ish those who have’ given the sti'q- ct only a mere pa-sing thought. . In Ne<v York alone, twelve 'ears ag' 1 , the census report set down the actual value of poultry at $3,000,000 T-lie.ci’y of Boston, according to statistics, expended for eggs in 1869, ( $2,000,000 and for po-.dlry the same year s3,(>oooeo, making the enormous sum of $5,000,000 expended in a third-class city ; for poultry and eggs. I have no doubt 1 but the estimate of $25,000,000 for eggs is 1 a low one, while that of poultry sold ; would swell the amount of the poultry interest to more than $250,000,000 And this refers to hens alone The additional ameiuit In geese, turkeys, ducks, guinea
fowls, a d pgeons 1 w II not attempt to considers. Another emp!oyme--t for g'rls is bee keeping. Aitnough a laborious employment. it de uands n<v great out-lay of strength at one time. It-embraces the performance of many little items which require s’id ftu-.i’ g.-ntleness. rrioie than muscle The hand of woman, from nature* habit and education. h s .acquired an <-a«e o' motion which is agre-. able <o the s.ui - - bilitlvs t bejs, aid. iwr bre.tl 1 is sei -m obnoxious to their olf.-ctories by mtf-n Os tobacco or beer. Woman is in allotted sphere while rais’iiu queen- and nursing weak colonies or cuing for hom y when offi the hive. VVe might give many more occupations for young women living in the country also many more instances cf girls and woman's success in their undertakings, but time forbids. The first thing is to decide what one will do and then do it. It is no v almost impossible ’o find any business in which woman is not engaged, if not as principal, as‘assistan, in which she pays the penalty of a lack of business knowledge and expetier.ee, by receiving a lower rate’ of remune.ration than a man would fordoing exactly the same work; but she must patiently bide her time and learn what it is that she c’.n do best, and not be spasmodic in . her work or in her business relations. A Present to Our Subscribers. It is with pleasure that we announce to our many patrons that we have made arrangements with thxt wide-awake, illustrated farm the American Farmer, published at Fort Wayne, Ind., and read by nearly 200,000 farmers by. which that great publication will be mailed direct free, to the address of any of our subscribers who will come in and pay up all arrearages on subscription and one year in advance from date, and to any new Subscriber who will pay one year in advance. This is a grand opportunity to obtain a first-class farm journal free. The American Fartncr is a large 16-page journal, cf national circulation, which ranks among the leading agricultural papers. It treats the question of economy in agriculture and*the rights and privileges of that vast body of citizens—American Farmers—whose industry is the basis of all material and national prosperity. Its highest purpose is the elevation ar.d ennobling ol agriculture through the higher and broader education of men and,women engaged in its pursuits. The regular subscription price of tlie Amer icctn Farmer is SI.OO per year. It costs you nothing. From any one number ideas can be ob tained thatwjill.be worth thrice the subscription price to you or members of your household, yet you get it free. Call ami see sample copy. Prescription of all Physicians Accurately compounded at Nacjitrieb’s drug store, where you can fil'd the largest stock of toilet articles, perfumeries, cosmetics, sponges, hair, bath,’shaving and tooth brushes. Truss fitting a specialty. All the leading patent medicines can be found on my shelves. My stock of drugs; and chemicals cannot be excelled in town. Also sole agent for Van Wert’s Balsam for the throat and lungs, which* I can recommend to all as a superior remedy for coughs, colds asthma, bronchitis and consumption. We guarantee to cure or money refunded. Call for a trial size free. Large dollar bottle, holding one-half pint, for 50 cents. Remember the place: Nachtrieb’s drug store. sl-*
Geneva Bank Reorganized. ■'. ; e The Geneva Herald of fast week has the following to say of the reorganization of the bank of that place: It is with pleasure that we announce to the many Herald readers this week that the Farmers and Merchants Bank, cf Geneva, is an organized institution doing business according to the Indiana banking laws,-with a contral'ing interest owned by stockholders in and near this place. On October 10, ISS9, this bank Was first opened to the public with a capital stock of $20,000. For fifteen months it flourished and did a good business. Frcxm the first its reliabilities were unjustly censured and to overcome that and place it on a solid foundation in the minds of all our people, stock Io the amount of $40,000 was issued and sold to the following named persons who constitute the directors and stockholders of the new bank: C. P. Beston, Chris. Burghalter, G. W. Obe-, M.J. Gottschalk. John Kraft, Elias Rie»en, Geneva; David Garber. Eli Sprunger, Chris. Hofstetter. Berne; Zemri Dwiggins and J. M. Starbuck, Chicago. The affic; rs are G. W. Ober, president; C. Burghaber, vice-president; John Karfl, cash.er, - ar.d M. J. Go’rschalk, assistant cashier. f The new organiiratlqn went into effect Monday and no one w\ll dare say a word against its financial standing in anv way as some of our most- f4ffi stan, - l -l moneyed men arexiontrolling stockholders. Eczema From Childhood. When an infant my body broke out all over with an eruption or rash, which became more aggravated as I grew older. From early childhood until I was grown my family spent a fortune trying to cure me of the disease. Every noted physician in our section was tried or consulted. When I came of age I visited Hot Springs. Ark., and was treated there by the best medical men, but was not benefitted. After that, the k-ivice of a noted specialist. I tried the celebrated Clifton Springs' New Yo r k, without any good results. When all things had failed I determined to try S S. Si, and in four months was entirely cured. The terrib’e eczema was all gone, not a sign left; my general health built up. and I have never had ant return of the disease. I have since recommended S. S. S. to a number of friends for skin diseases, eruptions, etp., and have never known ot a failure to cure. Geo. W. Irwin, Irwin, Pa. Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed iree. Swilt Specific Co,, Atlanta, Ga. | '
Direct or Indirect Taxation, 1 ne wealtl.b r class alwavs has been a- d always will be agaln-t dine’ laxatim. We cannot justly o »-.kime them for it, because it is human nature, but we do blame the poorer class, which is the wealth prod:.< i ■>; cl.-S'. :<‘.r . ;h v ; r sanction to l-iws tl-st bring t‘ le l urdt n. of taxation, upon themselves. f ont this is the efl ■ q r-f *1,9 present fi'i.u I irtuu-i 0.-.-. f,.: -mr.i no or.e who t-.zs vi'ven t•■v-q. ; -stlon ■* thought v. ill deny. Me a > not el. bo that th *v nay more tax 'brough this u than their wealthv neighbor. !. > < ve ,> o , they pav as mix!-., ,-.i i' :c . qv.rkty li-'i ■ the fact thalKhev sre m ecu.'till fi’t d to bear the same b'.:rce;i. We admit that the tariff protects as does also it- next d <o r neighbor—internal revenue—and it ii would stop at protection we would be glad to welcome it. but it does not. It commences by protecting the wealthy man from paving taxes according to the amount ot his possessions, as uxuld be the case in direct taxation, and ends by compelling the poor man, w*ho may not have a dollar that he can call his own. to pay a large tax annually of not less than $25 if he has a family to support, and from that on up to SSO. This would not be a large amount to a man of wealth, but to a man who can scarcely obtain the dire necessities of life it is quite an item. It would be something toward getting a start in life, and, while we do not believe that it is the only evil, nor even the greatest one that is holding him down, yt t it would be one step towards equalizing the wealth of the nation. What we want is to pull down the rich and rai«e the poor. That is the only way it ever can be done for the rich are on one end ot a berm, the poor on the other and the higher the bne goes the lower must ’he other fall, for the wealthy do not produce their wealth, but simply collect what others have produced, and it is plain to be seen that the more they get the less their neighbors will have. But the capitalists show us away out of our dilemma, and advocate a verv line theory —most too fine to be of any practical use. They tell us that we ought by industry and economy to obtain wealth, and thus enjoy the same privileges as the wealthy, lust how tar they would have us carry this theory of industry and economy they do not state, but perhaps until we would all become millionaires. Yes, it is a grand scheme and we only wonder that we had not thought of it before. But let us examine this wonderful mine of wealth. We will commence our economy first By reducing our. fare.to bread and hominy, then we will begin our industry by producing al) that we can possibly induce the soil to yield. After the large crop is harvested and stored away, you perhaps take a load of potatoes to market, and inquire of the fat grocery man what potatoes are worth. "Nodings, \’e dend py any,” is the answer. ‘•Why not?" yen inquire. “Veil, peoble flood use dem, da vas too egspenzive.” ‘ Well,, what do you pay for cabbage?” “Dond py any,” with a shake of the head. Then you inquire the price of beans, sweet potatoes, beets, pork, beef and various kinds of provisions to all of wbich you receive no answer but a shake of the head, and perhaps the information that people are getting rich by using economy and doing without such things. Then you go home with your load* of potatoes, and also with the conviction that it is not economy you need, nor in dustry, but the privilege of enjoying more ot what you have been producing. There can be but one result of too much industry aqd economy; i e overproduction and consequent low prices The rich are not only on the upper end of the beam but they have got that end propped up by legislation,- and there is no getting it down unless those props are torn away. And that is what we are going to do. The farmers are getting awake a ;d they mean business. The day is coming -when congress will occasionally make laws for the bcm fit of the producing class. We will have to get brave men into office, however, men who can look at fat bribe and not quail, but we expect to do it. A. M. U.
Page Woven Wire Fence Co. Wants a good agent for Adams county. It is not necessary that he be an expc. rienced salesman, but must; have the re spect and confidence, of the community, so that when he is thoroughly satisfied that we have the best and most salable fence nn the market, the farmers and land owners will be willifig to give it a trial. We sell no ‘rights - ’ or '‘territory,” nothing but actual fence, all complete and ready to stretch on the posts. No investment required until the business is proved. Implement dealers can handle it 'successfully if wi'lirg to give it proper atten tion. The right man can be sure of a permanent and constantly increasing busness. When satisfied that we have found him, we will undertake tn prove all our claims, Iby bringing him to the factory, it necessary, and showing hundreds of milrs in use. giving perfect satisfaction. Page Woven Wire Fence Co., % Adrian, Mich. An Acknowledgement. Messrs, Mofeit, Morgan & Co , Gentlemen: —You were correct in advising me to use Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup, and I wi<h to state that it has cured me of rheumatism with which I have been afflicted for fifteen year-. Peps pie who know me, know how I have suffered with it, and that I have tried many different medicines without relief. I can truthfully sav that Hibbard’s Rheumatic Syrup and Plasters have effected wonders in my? case, and I recommend them for kldnev and liver tr üble as well as rheumatism. Jacob Dixon. Qra w fordsv 11 le, Ind.
■’ '- ’• Il 7~: ■.. ;-rqq: ■ .. -. '., '. V ’ . •< a !■>:'; ;T. Take : l a- liamisu.ne pictures and v.tl liuß. ;n. abm.t horsesc Two. or three collars i r h-5 ? Horse Rkmket will make your horse worth more and eat less to keep warm. ( 5/A Five fclite , r ' 5/A Boss Stable Ask “’j 5/A Electric ( 5A Extra Test 30 other styles at prices to suit everybody. If you can’t get them from your dealer, write us. Corseblankets ARE THE STRONGEST. NONE GENUINE WITHOUTTHE 5’A LAPEL Mr.x;;r<i by Wm. .'.thfs t s-r-xs, I’jiflad.t, wlic -...--A I--.-.,.; OCK E T"PR INT E R REDUCED TO 25 CTS.. For irr/j. etc» Contains three alphabets r ßubber Tybe ko-.'le; . ink Ai,l ae. i t .-.■ ! vcr.-v i / ztp in a f t be-.'-. s '•'antedto trdz el o.i Salary. dart Free. CERCES & CO/ W. Market St. Lccisville. Ky. Mahesh Lovely Coiliplexion. Is a n&s. T< ::ic. and . s Beits, Pimp-Xe 1 . s-ro-tul.i. Atei-e-.-. al all; Jfyffisciis\s. S >.d l>j-y. :ir I’rGi-ipist. WinslGW,Lanier&Co. : 17 NASSAU STRIxET, Kew York, fOff irrSrEH.V STATES. COETOEATjOSS, S.i.VFS ASV MEXCJ/.1.V35. ta z £ o ht.d ON x>>:rosi‘js A:\it.. -a ns Fss o tj. 1 7 \ Heading and Stave Baits WANTED! - BY—hh hi d So. The Highest Cash Prici-s will he paid at all Stations oir the Clover l.eat. G. it. & 1 and C. & E. 'K-iilways. within twenty m-b-s of Decatur. The hiirh-.-st prices will be paid on the yards af'all times. Enquire at i!-. - Keil Factory, or see B. if . Dem, Superiutendent. i>. S. d 11. Co. S3tßS3B,sCKKCa!ifcniia. J.C. JUDSON & CO.’S personally conducted California Excursions in broad aanxe Pullman TotiriM Sleeping Cars, via Denver 4 Rio Grande R. IL, (the scenic line of the world) leave Chicago via Chicago X Alton IL R. 12:00 noon Saturday ot every weelr, each excursion in charge of an efficient and gentleman I y excursion manager. Pullman tourist sleeping ears-th rough from Boston and Chicago to San Fraw cisco and Loa Angeles. For rates, reservation of berths, etcu, call on or address, J. C. J UDSCW 4 CO. 1U& Clark Street. Chicago. ThVouOTuVASre you saw it, audsending 30 ‘2c stamps, or posta l notafor sixty cents, the WEEKLY Toledo. 0., yo-.t will re--.-civetheWeeklyßee by J ; -nail, postage paid, 1 January Ist, lai>2. The ] Boe hasßl urge pages. 1 eoliitniiseach.uiakiiig HMEsfe.v -jj®? s LqjjlJoi ! me and one quarter KS[ ! Draft nlles of reading each Wfjk l p--"’A'Li'tMar year. It is one of the rest general Weeklies n lliet'nitedStates; f .11 the News, great t-'to-ffiffjjsa — t •les. Household, Farm,isfagdKt Childrens Hour, P u z HgSZHI — des. Riddles, Rev. nage’s Sermons, Market Reports. Practical FoliJcs and Fricllon.Clean in everydepartment. Grand 3ieiuiun>st<> get’ers up of cl übs. Act at once nut? ihow your wisdom. Address plainly. No need to register letter. The WEEKLY BEE, Toledo, O.
I CURE i I Ml Us H Whaa I eay CtJRH I do not mean merely to stop thorn tor a time, and thou have thorn rj. turn again. I usah A RADICAL CuxUlk I have taade the disease oi eots, EPmEFST ©j? siemmss, A life long study. I WAnRA'iT my remedy to CUKE the worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle Os my Infallible REMEDY. Give Express and Poet Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and A will cure you. Address H. Q. BOOT, M.C.. 183 FEftm. St.. NtwYexi WHIT SCOTT’S S™ EAgIRIQION BRONCHITIS coUCHS - fvSBESS’P’ COLDS Wasting Bisaasea Wonderful Flosh Producer. Many have gained one pound per day by its use. Scotts Emulsion is not a secret remedy. It contains the stimulating properties of the Hypophos£hites and pure Norwegian Cod iive» Oil, the potency of both being largely increased. It is used by Physicians all over the world. PALATABLE A8 MILK. Sold by all -Drutftfists. •OOTT A BOWNC. CMmlc t*. H.Y,
New Spring Line of s Dress Goods! ”r • ‘ Next Week. Y Just Received—Boo Bushels of White Star c * ■- and Beauty of Hebron Pota/oes, at / Jesse Niblick & Son’s. 1 »!■ ■■■■— —■■ | _ 11. ~»■■■■■ Il - Jolin I? - - Ijacliot V ' * A- 5 - KEEPS A FULL LINE OF Pure Drugs, Patent Medicines, Paints, Oils, Brushes, loilet and Fancy Articles. Also Shiloh’s Cure for Con sumption and Vitalizer. All of which will be sold at the lowest living prices. Prescriptions carefully compounded. Give me a call. '. / j-. j ■>' • 5? 1 - LACELOT, Berne, Ixxcl. V. 33. SIJVTOOELE!, THE MONROE DRUGGIST, Keeps a full line of Drugs, Patent Medicines, Fancy Articles, Tobaccos, Cigars, &c. Prescriptions carefully compounded. Sole agent tor Silverware and Jewelry of all kinds. Call and see Van when in Monroe. Great Reduction ■ ■ ■I3ST |'h * * I . ‘ Overcoats, Clothing, Hats, Caps and Furnishing Goods at - ' - 2 Ike Rosenthal’s, . * • ' . Sign of the Big . * . . .
