Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 March 1894 — Page 4

THE BANNER TIMES. GREENCASTLE. INDIAN A. WEDNESDAY, MARCH, 21. 1894.

i

B. F. JOSbIN Hndles thi* llitfliot (iradc Brazil BUnk

ODD FELLOWS.

COAL

And tht' Brst Pittabunrh and Anthracite 4 . Coa yard opposite Vandalia freight office*.

Il.miAMS ('.ARID KIR. If you have* a house for sale or rent, and

it is proving an “elephant on your hands. ” le*t us look afte 4 r it. We'll sell it or let it, as yeni wish, if the n 's a ]»ossihle eusteuner in town. Hived that fact in your mind, then call and

we*’!! clinch it.

J. d- A/, f HUHLBY, Inf3urance, Real Estate.

and Loan. • * «

Pivonii Floor. First N«ti<mal Hank Huililinir

CITY DIRECTORY. CITY OFFICERS. Mayor. Charles B. Caae Treasurer Fra 11 k l,. 1.anti cm Clerk .laraea M Hurley Marshall William E. Starr EiiKineer Arthur 'Ihroop Attorney Thomas T. Mta.re Board of Health....F.UKcne Hawkins M. D

COCNCILMEN.

Thomas At.riuna. J. I.. Randel

‘ ‘|ri>a

Gen. E. Bloke, .lames Rridire John HI ley. John K. Mlile

1st Ward.,

2nd ”

Street Commissioner J * 1). Cutler Eire Chief Geo. H Cooper j

A. Hroekwav. )

Mrs. Mary Bireh, >School Trustees,

it L. Anderson, I

H. A. Otor. Superintendent of city schools.

roKEST It I l.l, CCMGTEKY BOARD OF DIRECT- |

OHS.

J. S. McClary .. •lohu < .BrowniiiK ' Pres

J. K. Eanadoo

H. 8. Hen tek Treas

•Supt

James Dairiry

E. E. Blac k. A. O. Lockrldae

Meetlmr first Wedneaday Iiisht C'aeh month

at J. S. McClary’* office.

S G

S<ai

SECRET SOCIETIES.

I.O.O. F.

OKERRCASTI.E I.ODOE SO JUS.

Bruce Fraaier L. M Hanna ••• W1 Meeting niKhta, every Wednesday. Hail, in

Jerome Allen’s Block. 3rd tioor.

PUTNAM LODGE NO. 45.

John A. Michael ^ E. P. Chaffee. Meeting nights, every Tuesday. Hall in Central National Bank block, 3rd tioor.

CASTLK CANTON NO. 30, P. M.

J. A.Michael CgPt Chas Meikel First and third Monday nights of each

month.

D. OF k. NO. 108.

Mrs. John Merry weather. G D. B. Badser. •••••••- Meetinir niirhts. every 2nd nod 4tli Mondat of each month. Hall in central Nat. Hank

bnilditiK. Jed tioor.

OKKENCA8TLE I»DOE -121 O. U. O. OF O. Fj Wm.Hartwood ^-G H. I.. Hryan ”• ® Meets iirst and thini Mondays.

MASONIC.

EASTERN STAB. Mrs. Hickson w . M Mrs. llr. Hawkins ....See First Wednesday niKht of each month. GREENC AST LECH AFTER K. A. M. NO 21. H. s. Renlok R- 1 H.s. Heals ...800 Second Wednesday niiiht of each month. blue lodge f. ano a. m. .Tease Richardson w . M H.S. Heals.. ...See Third Wednesday niirht of each month. COMMAXDEKV. W. II. II Cullen E. C J. Mel). Hays ••Sec Fourth Wednesday nisht of each month. KOGAN LODGE, NO. ID. F. * A. M. H. L. Hryan 'V . M J. W.i aln See Meets second and fourth Tuesdays. W HITE LILY CHAPTER, HO. 3, O.E. S. Mrs. M. Florence Miles W M Mrs. M. A. Telster Sec Meets second and fourth Mondays.

KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. EAGLE LODGE NO. 111. Wn.. M Brown C. C David Hmrnes —Sec Every Friday biifht on 3rd Hoor over Thus. A Prams store." GREENCASTLE DIVISION V. R. W. E. Starr Ogpt B.Strattan Sec First Monday niKht of each month. A.O. C. W. COLLEGE CITY LODGE NO. 9. Linn Denton M. W A. H. Phillips See Second and 4th Thursdays of each month. DEGREE OF HONOR. Mrs. K I. Higcrt C. of H Mlile Blac k Sec First anil third Fridays of each month. Hall on lird tioor City Hall Block.

Sachem

Sec on 3rd tluor

RED MEN.

OTOE TRIBE NO, 140.

Jacob Kiefer. Thoa. Save Every Monday nitthl. Hall

City lliill Block.

KOVALARCANCM. LOTI7S COHNCIL NO. 329. W. G. Overstreet It Chas. Landes Sec Second and fourth Thursdays of each month Meet in G. A. K. Hall. KNIGHTS OF HONOIt. MYSTIC TIE LODGE, NO. 639.

W. A.Howe

J. D. Johnson..

Dictator Reporter

C 'Jl 0 -M

G. A. R. GREENCASTLE POST NO. 11. A M. Maxon L. P. i haptn Wm. II. Burke Every Monday eventiiK at T:;tn o’clock. Hall corner Vine and WushiiiKton streets, 2nd floor. woman's relief corps. Alice It i hatiln Pres Louise JacottK ^ See Mt*c‘tIoks every second and fourth Monday at 2 p. in. G. A. It. Hall.

FIKK ALARMS. 2— 1 College ave and Liberty Bt. 3— 1 Indiana and Hanna ♦—1 Jackson and Daggy. 5—1 Madison and Liberty. >>—i Madison and Walnut, tl—2 Hanna and Crown. 4— 2 Uloomlngton and Anderson. «—2 Seminary and Arlington. 6 2 Washington, east of Durham. 7 2 Washington and Locust. 2—3 Howard and Crown. 4- 8 Ohio and Main. 5- 3 College ave. and DeMotte allt^y. 6- 3 Loeost and Syeamore. 1--2—1 Eire out. The police call Is one lap then a pause and then follow the box numoer COUNTY OFFICERS.

ileo. M. Black

F. M. Glldcwcll.

Geo. Hughes

Daniel T. Darnell Daniel S. Hurst

i. F. t I'Brlen F. M. Lton. T. W. McNeff

Auditor Sheriff ,

Treasurer

Clerk i

Kecorder Surveyor I Senool Superintendent Coroner I Assessor ! See. Hoard of llealll.

A. 0. U. W. Mrs. J. M. Nichols, Grand Recorder Missouri Degree of Honor—Notes. The first grand lodge of the degree of honor was organized in Missouri in November. Mrs. Harley la-avitt was elected grand chief of honor anti Mrs. J. M. Nichols grand recorder. Both of these ladies have had much experience in charitable work ami are well fitted Aor the positions MRS. J. M. NICHOLS. they were chosen to fill. Mrs. Lue DeHaven, Mrs. M. Kirtley and Mrs. A. Hisley have been appointed deputies by the grand chief of honor. The officers are now really for earnest work for the welfare of the order. Ontario lias now a membership 1,000 larger than Missouri, and Kansas is not.far behind the latter. The fraternal newspapers published in the interests of the order are now agitating the subject of #1,000 certificates. No A. O. U. W. warrant lias ever gone to protest, nor has its pledge ever iieen dishon-

ored.

In order to insure t he success of a lodge there must lieeaniestco-operation between tho cfficers and the members. No officers can make a lodge successful unless they receive the aitl of the members. The Ancient Order of United Workmen Ready Relief association of Brooklyn is growing very rapidly and now numbers over 127) members. Fargo, N. D., is experiencing a taiom. In one week recently 12.‘> members were taken in, and the following week l b more were received. MASONIC. A Historic Lodge Celebrates Its Centennial—Temple Notes. The Brownsville (Pa.) Masonic lodge, No. 60, which, with lodge 45 of Pittsburg, was tlie only lodge west of the Alleghany mountains to survive the anti-Masonic crusade and retain its original charter, celebrated its one hundredth anniversary recently. Several of the old members of this lodge who were present recalled the visit of Andrew Jackson to the lodge on Feb. 2, 1629, as he passed through Brownsville over the old national pike cn his way to Washington to take the presidential chair, a record of which visit is still shown in an old minute iiook of the lodge. The small souled, narrow minded ami quarrelsome man is out of place in a Masonic lodge. A magnificent temple, to tie devoted to the Mystic Shrine of Chicago, is being erected in that city. The grand lodge of Iowa recently celebrated its fiftieth anniversary at Dubuque. The grand lodge was instituted at Iowa City on .Ian. 8, 1844, four lodges being represented. They were Burlington, Muscatine, Dubuque and Iowa City, representing 150 members. There are now 500 lodges and a membership of 25,000 in the state. The man who is dishonest, unfaithful, intemperate, licentious or otherwise wanting in moral quality is not the kind of material that is wanted in the Masonic fraternity. The report of Grand Secretary J. S. Conover of the grand chapter of Michigan, Royal Arch Masons, shows 124 chapters, with a membership of 11,758. It is generally conceded that men of tin worthy character ought not to be admitted to the rights and privileges of Masonic niembersnip. South Carolina commandery. No. 1, Knights Templars, is the oldest commandery in the United States. The original diploma was issued Aug. 1, 1788. If you intend to pursue the study of Masonry with any result, it is indispensable that you attend the lixlge regularly. This is your apprenticeship, and without it you will never liecome a distinguished Mason. There is no short cut to the acquisitiou ol knowledge. RED MEN. Kxerriae Care In Heleeting Chiefs—Arouml the Counrll Eire. No one should be elected or appointed t« a chieftaincy in a tribe who has not shown a willingness to take an active part in tribal work, who has not iieen faithful in his attendance or who has not performed the duties with which from time to time he may have Iieen intrusted. A shirker never makes a good officer, ami when an officer is a shirker the result is demoralizing. A Red Men’s day at Atlantic City the coming summer is now a certainty. The matter has been successfully agitated, and great expectations are the result. The great tncohonee cannot grant permission to issue circulars soliciting contributions for a tribe. Pottawatomie council of Camden. N. J., recent ly gladdened the heart of a sick and destitue brother by presenting him with sufficient coal, provisions and money to keep him and his family from want for sev eral months. The law limiting the eligibility of brothers to the chieftaincy of great sachem does not go into effect until after a great council has been instituted two great suns.

Win. Hroadstreet. G \V. Bence, M. D.. J.D. Hart. 1

Fainuel Farmer / Commissioners.

John 6. Newgent)

Knights of Honor. lieports from Bro. K. Bacon, grand lecturer for South Carolina,.are encouraging. He is doing good missionary work. At the late session of t he grand lodge of Wisconsin the^ representatives were instructed to vote for biennial sessions of the supreme lodge. There seems to exist a general complaint about the lack of interest of the members in the meetings of the subordinate lodges. Grand Dictator Ingersoll of New York is to lie congratulated upon having such at able assistant as Grand Vile Dictator M H. Harte Indepamleiit Order of f oresters. The reserve fund has increased to |823,000 The order has made rapid strides recently. The membership now is 56,000, and new courts are being inst ituted frequently. The supreme court organizers in Maine, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, New Jersey and other jurisdictions are reporting increased interest in Forestry and,numerous accessions to the membership of existing courts as well as in the formation of new courts which they are organizing.

Splendid Work of the Idaho Jurisdiction. Kebelcah Degree Notes. Idaho, with a membership of only t,700, has nearing completion a #10,000 home for disabled Odd Fellows and widows and or phaus. The Reliekahs are taking Iowa by storm. Fifty-five Rebekah lodges have been instituted in tlie jurisdiction during the past year. According to t he very latest reports, there are 2,000 members of Rebekah lodges in Kentucky. Toronto and Ottawa have Iieen blessed by the institution of Reliekah lodges. Maine lias 57 Rela-kah lodges and 5,577 membera, a net gain for the year of 730. Women are rapidly becoming the most potent element for good in Odd Fellowship. With all the disadvantages under which they labor, the work of the Reliekah lodges proves this. Dollie Kanable, P. N. G., received a handsome jewel on miring from the chair at Aureola (Cal.) Rebekah lodge. A Rebekah lodge is not on the road to success until the officers have committed their charges to memory, and a book is not used except for reference. Mrs. Clara II. Bart lett, past noble grand of Peerless Rebekah lodge of Brockton, Mass., has been presented with a past noble grand's collar and jewel by members of the body. Eighteen Reliekah degree lodges were instituted in Michigan during the past year. It has a membership of 9,000 in that branch of the order. Eighty signatures have iieen obtained requesting a charter for a Rebekah lodge at Holliston, Mass. In the matter of establishing Odd Fellow homes the Reliekahs must be given the credit of taking the leading part in most every case. The president of the national Rebekah convention that met in Chicago last Sep tember wrote to the grand sire for authority to call the convention together at Chattanooga next September, to which the grand sire replied that lie had no authority to call a convention at that time or place.

AMERICAN LEGION OF HONOR. Growth, Outlook anti Kesotirres of the Order—Notes and Gossip. It won’t be a great while liefore the assessments levied for the payment of death claims will diminish, for the American Legion of Honor was never so well fixed numerically, financially and actively as at present. It owns the entire suit of buildings in the city of Boston in which the vast business of the tinier is transacted, thus saving excessive rentals. Something that no other fraternal endowment organization has in America is offered by the legion, a reserve fund of an even #500,000, which is culled from the assessments levied, 1 per cent going in to make up that amount,and which is used to pay additional benefits without calling for extra assessments. No companion in the ranks of the legion has given more time, intelligent effort and keen perception to the affairs of the order than Supreme iiepresentative Alfred Stover. One hundred and sixteen applications were filed the week of Jan. 26. Over 400 members were initiated in Massachusetts in 1898, the number for the entire order being 6,572. Dr. E. G. Rave of Melfen council, at Hicksville, has been appointed a special deputy to the board of deputies of the department of Long Island by Grand Commander Cook of New York.

KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS.

Mtusaehusetta l iilfurm Hank Is Hustling. Spear Taints. A number of the divisions of theuniform rank of the old Bay State are beginning to make preparations for thetripto Washington next August. It is expected that nearly every division in the state will be well represented. During the past year Watertown (N. Y.) lodge has gained 87 new members. Bro. M. Manning of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., lodge received 3,100 votes for the Knight’s uniform at the late fair of the uniform rank. The division cleared over #1,100. Why does not Massachusetts have a Pyth ian home) Nebraska lodge. No. 1, was organized Nov. 23, 1868, and has the iionor and distinction of lieing the first Knights of Pythias lodge organized west of the Alleghany mountains. The Nebraska grand lodge was instituted Oct. 18, 1869. There are now 154 subordinate lodges, with a membership of over 7,000. The endowment rank—the insurance department of tiie Knights of Pythias—was organized at Cleveland in 1877. The uniform rank was organized at Indianapolis Oct. 2, 1882. A. ami I. O. Knights of Malta. The Knights Hospitaller of St. John of Jerusalem, afterward known as Knights of Cyprus ami Knights of Rhodes, and finally Knights of Malta, hits entered upon its eight hundred and forty-sixth year of con LI-uouh existence as a religious and mill tary order. Mount Horeb commandery, No. 141, of Altoona, Pa., is distinguishing itself by its fine rendition of the ritual and is enjoying an extraordinary growth. Supreme Commander Sir William T. Fol line has rendered an important decision de•Ining the right of subordinate communderies to change their place of meeting. He decides that a commandery can move from one locality to another in the same district or township if the application has been signed by a majority of the members in good standing and thedispensatibn granted by the supreme or a grand commander. The highest source of Maltese authority in the world today is the imperial parent grand black encampment, with headquarters at Glasgow.

Order of the Kerf Crons. F. A. Ray of Lansing, grand scribe of Michigan, reports an increase of 195 members in bis jurisdiction during the past few months. Sandusky commandery, Ohio, will soon have a commandery of Knights. The prizes for the contest of 1893 have all Iieen received by contestants and give general satisfaction. Star commaiai’ry, No. 7, of Akron, O., with nearly 100 male members, and Crescent commandery of the same place, with 86 members, will consolidate into one commandery and will probably take the name of Star and Crescent commandery, No. 7. The Knights of Illinois are getting gold luce for their uniform made in Germany expressly to order. They claim to have succeeded in obtaining one of the finest uniforms ever designed for similar orgauiza tions.

IN THE APIARY.

A Common 6ent« Talk to Haglnnera. Thin*, to Do and Thing, to Avoid. Spring is tlie most suitable time to begin the business. The bees are then wintered. and if tlie ensuing summer is a good honey season some surplus honey and increase will be obtained. Let every one who contemplates investing in bees begin now to read up and get all the information he can. The management of bees is both a science and an art. The former can be learned from books, but the latter must be learned from the manipulation of liees themselves in the apiary. No oi£ need despair of success who has a good degree of common sense. This is indispensable for every pursuit, but especially for apiculture, where emergencies will arise that we must master by tlie exercise of our own judgment. Any one of ordinary intelligence, by close application to tlie study of some standard author on apiculture, can master the general principles of the science in a few weeks. He will not, of course, in that time become an expert in the thousand and one devices now lauded to the skies, but he will have acquired the fundamental principles on which the science is founded and on which success in the art is based. These principles are not numerous and are easy of application if properly understood, says The Farm Journal, which adds this advice: Let no tyro in the bee business puzzle his brain with such devices as nonswarmers, automatic swarm catchers, self hivers, etc. It is constitutional for the bees to swarm, and until their constitution is changed, whenever conditions arise, suitable for swarming, swarm they will. All success in modern bee culture has been attained by a close adherence to what is in the nature of the bee. The great success of the movable comb hive invented by the Rev. Mr. Langstroth was owing to the fact that it conformed to the social nature of the bee by furnishing a large receptacle, like the gum log and the square box, and at the same time allowing the combs -to be fastened to frames instead of to the walls of the hive. The same may he affirmed of every other device that has advanced apiculture. They have all conformed to the nature and instincts of the liee. During the winter nothing of importance can be done for colonies that are on their summer stands. In southern localities breeding begins in January. Should the weather be favorable to facilitate this, care must be exercised not to allow them to become destitute of provision When colonies commence to breed rapidly, supplies will dtsapjiearas if by magic. We have lost excellent colonies in an open winter from this cause alone. Frames of sealed honey can he given on any warm day to colonies that are likely to fall short. Granulated extracted honey can be placed on the top of the frames above the cluster on the canvaa or duck, providing there is a hole made in the cloth rendering it accessible to the been. The IcehouHe PavM. Experiments have proved that the icehouse pays on most iarms as well as every other building erected. There is no occasion for making it a costly structure. Up "in the land of the Dakotas" they have found that ice can be kept in a building made of sod. They have also discovered that peat or pond muck, dug in summer and dried in the sun, is as good as sawdust for preserving ice. Parties who put up ice for the market no longer have double walls in their icehouses. There is a space of a foot or more between the pile of ice and the wall, and this they fill with sawdust oi some substitute for it. When a cake of ice is taken oat, this material falls hidI fills the cavity. The material employed for preserving ice one season can be used several times, if care be taken to dry it in the spring by exposing it to the sun. This prevents it from fermenting and rotting and keeps it sweet, says The Prairie Farmer.

Homemaila F>«-«1 Rack. A feed rack described by Ohio Farmer, which can tie made at home, is 10 feet long, 3i feet high and 3 feet 4 inches wide. It is open at top and lias no bot-

ECO.NOM1CAL FEED RACK. tom in it. It is boarded up 20 inches from the bottom on all four sides, marked A. All the other boards are 6 by 1 fencing. All the spaces marked Barethrough which the cattle reach to eat, the feed being thrown inside. Hook it together with hooks and staples at each corner, above and below. Use wrought nails and clinch on the inside. Stock cannot run over and waste feed such as hay, fodder, etc. Items of L.octtl Interest. From as far west as Missouri hired men have written to learn what wages are paid in the dairy districts of New York state. The Rural New Yorker says, ‘‘In these times the man who is doing fairly well would better 'stick to hia last.’ ” The Illinois state board of agricultnre will expend $300,000 on the new state fair grounds. The Dakotas are beginning to talk about irrigation with the aid of windmills. Do not waste time and money trying to grow profitable crops from land whose first need is thorough draining. Husking corn by hand Is about the most senseless practice now remaining to our agriculture. Perhaps the low price of wheat brings with it some compensations, says Field and Farm. Farms are never made rich by selling off grain, and the low price of this cereal has increased the amount of it that is ted at home. In fact, it lias been the means of teaching auiue fanners that wheat is good to feed.

“Simplest and Best”

THE FRANKLIN

AT DEATHS DOOR FROM TRICHINA Family of Six Feraon* SHzorf After Fating Summer Samu&ge. Plano, Ills.. March 21.—The family ot Herman Thuron, consisting of six jiersons, is lying at death's door with trichina caused by eating uncooked summer s.iu sage. There is but faint hopes of any of the numlier living. Thuron is a German farmer, living five miles southwest of this place. Hold For itlgamy. Bloomington. Ills., March 21.—John T. Hiler. who was arrested recently in Chicago and brought here charged with i bigamy, was given a hearing yesterday and was held to the grand jury in default of $2,0<Kl bail. Less than a month ago he married Miss Grace Washburn of this city after less than a day's acquaintance. At the examination another wife i appeared and testified. She was formerly Miss Lizzie Myers of Appleton, Wis., and married him there after but a few days’ acquaintance. Soldier** IIohm* Not Implicated. Topeka, starch 21.—Charles Taylor, sent to Dodge City to investigate the trouble over the diseased beef, telegraphs that the case against Weil cannot implicate the soldiers' home, as tlie complaint itself sets forth that the commandant had no knowledge of the character of

the beef.

Conviction Commended.

Providence, March 21.—Rhode Island

Democrats yesterday renominated the present state officers, commended the Sherman law repeal, pending tariff legislation. repeal of federal eh ction laws and

the conviction of Boss MrKane. NVgnt <Hi),-ction to n Ki‘|iriinavitl* Wharton. Tex., March 21.—H. G.

Boldin, a wealthy planter, last year purchased several large Inidies of laud in I Matagorda county. On this land ne-1 groes imported from Alabama were col- j onized. Failing to do their work Boldin reprimanded them. Late yesterday i a mob of 50 negroes went to his house , and shot him to death. Sixteen of them are in jail and lynchings and a race war |

are imminent.

Waite I>et€»rmined to Fight.

Denver, March 21.—The militia returned from ('ripple Creek is held under orders to await the jiolice Isiard court decision, by which the governor will not, be bound unless his questions are di- j rectly answered. The governor's private I secretary says impeachment or<sssaasina-! tion can only prevent the calling out of |

troops.

Denouncing ItoMchery*

London. March 21.—The Times this morning prints a manifesto issued by the Irish National league of Great Britain violently denouncing the attitude of Lord Rosebery and tlie anti-Parnellites.

Itea/.ir* War Not Over.

Bt ENOS Ayres, March 21. Advices i A Wpvcf Rponfifi i| ^sfDlVPnir from Porto Alegre, capital of Rio Grande i H J>lUM DtMLlllIUI ^OUVCllir. do Sul, are to the effect that the insur-: gents apjiear determined to overthrow W ith a desire to again promote the inthe federal government. I , , , . teresisot its readers, Iiik I>aii.y Han-

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mg the interest of that amount. A man I \ ORDER rn v v, u i, tu r t,i c.. who owned nearly $500,000 worth of real . I > AN till IHERISIL estate said that he could not sleep nights ’'PPltoattons should be made promptly, for more than afortnight worrying about j ils a * l * u ‘ Coupons appear in The

meeting his obligations. i Daily Banner Times,

A man worth more than $1,000,000 ' The well-deserved reputation of Hie tried to raise a loan on the very best piece | Shepp Brothers, whoso firm i- known of real estate in the weet and could only „11 over thq United States ami in Ku-

get a quarter part of the amount he .

wanted. A shoe manufacturer sold a ,,, * uaii,ntL ‘° t,iat ’’^hepp s large bill of goods, dating the bill four j • ' '' ^ alr Photographed” will be ismonths from June. He wanted his mon- i s,u ‘^ !n D"'*'' usual first-class style, and ey long liefore the bill matured, but his "imi neither pains nor expense will be debtor was in the same predicament, so , spared to make it worthy of the great

wnt^ ! lim - H . 6 HHi '' ' v " t whkl ‘ ^graphically, thoroughafterward. This will be a lesson to me; , y an(1 ab]y pol . traVM _

Subscriptions for any magazine or paper taken at this cilice. Wo

| I’ll never make such another transac- ^ tion.” The compensation for these trials j is coming now. The mistakes of overproduction and dating ahead are being

tuivvv'i ueing 1 1 ~

corrected.—Shoe and Leather Reporter. , will save you money.

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