Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 July 1895 — Page 4
1895
CT m :s TIIK L'OliACCO IlAlilT IN 4 TO 10 DAYS OH MONEY IIEFUNDED.
away aim me metai very rusiea, nm, ne fondly declared that there was not enough money in New York to buy it. It is related, however, that very few of the soldiers could locate the places where their most exciting experiences took place, as their minds at that time were not on the features of the land-
scape.
Frightful Roll.
Of course I am not going to write the history of these battles, though, in my humble opinion, it has not yet been done, but before I mention them in the I order of my tramp I ivill emphasize the
I counties constitute the Belgium of North I f ,lor “ 1 Ht: ' , ‘ ,nu ; u, T a> !" ve h / « ivin * th( ; I Owl 1 o. f.'.rtih.T- ... .iw. bare figures and the lowest estimates at
ISC’AKS OF (iUHI U AK. MR. BEADLE VISITS THE BELGIUM OF
THE REBELLION.
From Germanna Ford to Sp<»ttsylv»ui» Court lloune Ih One Cong Rattleflrld. Virginia Cold Mining A General Air of
Refinement Among the People.
[Special Correspondence.]
Brock's Crossing, Va., July 8.— Spottsylvania and adjacent strips of Orange, Hanover, Louisa and Caroline
SKIN TIGHT SUEEVES. bocal Time Ca
THEY HAVE BEEN SEEN PARIS.
IN STYLISH
HIO KOUH going hast'
No. :>i* (''iicinnr.li Night , No St IndiHnupoIlK Act in No. 4 + lmllauu|>ollt Flj 11 i No Mail No. 18* Knickerbocker
GOING WKST
No. S3* Pt. I. A Cin. Night Ex No. »* Mail ■ l No. II* Southwestern Limited ; \o 5 + Mattoon Aee'm No. 3* Terre Ace'm
fti.
Daily t Rxonut Sunday
No. night express, hauls tliruiuri,
« 3 ut k and Host, ,i ?
■-^pi
Cincinnati, New
nects with trains tor Mich'ipin Anderson and lor < Ineinnutl
so All t ho Till Your
TobclGGO ‘Ora vincj”
You Want is Gone.
\ aid oi i t T im is the only reinedv in the world that acts direi tly on the nerve.- and drives the nicoline from the -v -lein in from four to ten day*. Il leaves tile pate nt in better healih Ilian before taking, and is warranted free frotn any injurious ingredients. \ \itcotl-t'i‘UK is popular beeaioe il allows the patient to n-e all (lie toba-eo he wants while under Ireatniellt, or until the •‘craving ’ and “hmki • ing'' are gene. Il i- then no -aeritiee to throw away lohaeeo forever. N vi; oi i-( i in: i- sold at th- unil'orin price ot if.'i.im a hoitle and one bottle cures. Money refunded .f a cure i- not alleeted when taken according to directions.
Prof, VV. N. WAITE. Of Amherst, Mass., Chewed robaeco
or 16
Years and was cured by Narcoti-Cure. Amherst, Mas-., rebruary ■•'. Ibbo. The Nurcoti < hemical ('o.,
tspringrtebl, Ma-s.
Gentleim n :—Kepiying to yours of tlie 1st. would say that I have used tobacco for Hi years, and of late have ernaituied a 10-eent plug a nay, besides smoking considerably. I eominetieed to use tobacco wlien I was only 11 years old ami have never been able (ogive lip the habit until I took Xareoti-t'lire, although I have tried other so called remedies without etl'ert. After using your remedy four days, all "liankering'’
for chewing disappeared, and in day* more smoking became unplca
have no further desire for i he weed, and «*xperii-need no bad etleets, whatever. I am gaining in llesh and feel lietter than 1 have for a long time. To all who wish to lie free from the tobacco habit I would say. use WvucoiM rate,
yours truly, W. \. U AITK.
If your druggist is unable to give y u full particulars about NARCOTI-CURE, seud to us for Book of Particulars free, or send
$5.00 for a bottle by mail.
1 mg laicsii Gttcal 5e„
UmMi Glass
m.
ICYCLES.
tf ALL High Grades,
W;irrHiit. A mipci it»r to any Uicyolc* built in the world. reyrardlcKa of price. Honot bo induced t o pay more tnonny for an inferior wiicc 1 . Insist on liavingthc NVavcily. Itiiilt ami guaranteed l»y the Indiana Illcycle Co., a tniilion dollar concern, whose bond in as good as gold. 24 LB SCORCHER, S85. 22 LB LADIES’, $75 ANDKKSON & HAKKIS. Exclusive Agents iSi it
VAN CAMP BOSTON BAKED' poRH |fANS"\:
Always moist, fresh ami ready for the table or jtienic spread. Equally delie ions hot or eold. The tomato sauce adds a pleasant tart to the taste. In three sixes: 10, 15 and 2oe. All grocers. look close > fur the trade mark.
Van Camp Packing Company,
Indianapolis, Ind.
Rig 1 our I xcnrHions* To Warsaw,gning tint I Aug. .‘10. returning lilteen days I'nun date nt sale
$1.(13,
To Baltimore and Washington, .Inly Iti and 17, return limit, Aug. 5th
f 17.20.
lietbaity I’ark, July 21! to Aug, 2, re turn limit Aug. 2-ltli. $1 . s '>. Koine City, Ind., July 2Htii to Aug. 14, return limit Aug. 17, $.'>..->ib Lima, ()., Aug. ."> and H, return limit Aug. 10, $.'1,411. To Boston. Aug. 1!) to 25. extreme return limit Sep. 12, half fare. Columbus, O.. Ang. 20 to 22, return limit Aug. 20, $0.50. The annual excursion via Kig Four to Niagara Falls will start Aug. 0. Pleasant train service and reduced rates for enteitaiunieiit, and side trips will lie arranged. To Baltimore and Washington, July 10 and 17, good retttrni'ig until August 5, $27.20. To Warsaw, Ind., account Winona assembly, .1 uly 5 to Aug. ill, goo I tetm niiig 15 day « after date of sale, $ 1.05. F. 1’. IIi kstis. Age. u. v. p. r. cox\ kn 1 nix. Baltimore. Md., July 1S-21. Big Four route, olllcial route Irnm Ind - ana. < Mie fare for the round trip. Tickets good going July 10 and 17. and good returning until August 5th. Tin-oiil-eial 1 rain will leave Ihdiamiunlis at il p, 111. July 10 v ia the B g Four and (Tiesapeuke A Ohm Kailways. For full information address traiispnrtaioii leader, ! L. A. < lark. 1 rawfordsville. Ind.
j
■ ■ ; 1 1 '■ . v - . •*
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t VeS-S Sr -',1
CULVER WiLiTSS'/ aillilFKiY.
America, not indeed in fertility, as the region as a whole is among the poorest in Virginia, and much less in density of
population, for half the area is stilloov- j ered by native woods. The wild deer is I still hunted over the old battlefields; 1 turkeys, foxes and opossums abound, |
and even the pheasant, extinct in the central northwest, is occasionally brought down by a skillful marksman. In these solemn woods I came up<m more thau one creature which is but a reminiscence of liuyln>■ k! in the west, as, compared with the Ohio valley, this is a wild mid unsettled country. The quail and squirrel show that at this season they have no fear of man, and even the male redbird, shiest as well us most graceful of all that hide in the forest, allows the rambler tocome near enough to get a snap shot with a kodak.
The Relgiutn of America.
As Belgium was the battlefield of Europe, so this region was the disputed ground for two blot sly years, and save in the immediate vicinity of Richmond none other can compare with it in battle records. On an area not -to miles either way, containing certainly not more than 1,400 square miles, were fought six of the bloodiest buttles of t lie civil war and scores of minor engagements. On this area over 8,000 men were shot down and 50,000 men captured or slightly wounded. Through all the central part of it one may walk today on continuous lines of old breastworks; in the densest woods one comes suddenly upon riflo pits and old trees still bearing the scars of conflict, and everywhere in the cleared lands the plow still turns up fragments of siiot and shell, bullets and
Li f ■ : y
: ' -- SAB?
that. I lump the losses, but the curious | reader cau find the proportion of killed, ! wounded and captured in the regular records. At Fredericksburg the Fedrrals lost 12,358 and the Confederates : 4,576; at Chaucellorsville the respective ; losses were 17,030 and 12.2S1 ; in the i Wilderness, all battles, they were 87,757 and 11,400, and at Spottsylvania Court 1 House, including the bloody angle, they I were 26.401 and 9,250. Add forth* 1 minor engagements, and it will appear i that simply in crossing this country Burnside, Hooker and Grant lost about 95,000 men, while their opponents lost I-but 39,000. This inequality of slaughter increased with every move farther south ] until, at Cold Harbor, Grant lost 18,981 and Lee but 1,720. Then the frightful system of hurling solid columns headforein st on breast works was abandoned, but that is beyond the scope of this let-
; ter.
At Fredericksburg I walked along the famous sunken road from which the Confederates shot down about 8,000 of our men, they losing but half as many hundreds. It was only when they came out and made a Hank charge that their li isses were heavy. It is 10 )\v so concealed by new buildings and orchards that one cannot see the entire sweep which the shot must have had, but even now it is hard for a common man to understand how a military man could have thought it possible to capture such a position held by skilled riflemen. Above the road at the south end rises the hill, now a beautiful national cemetery. In it lie the remains of 16,285 soldiers, of whom 12,795 are unknown. All around the ^ hillsides are beautifully terraced, and there is but a small area level on top, for the cemetery covers but 12 acres, but it is as beautiful tvs any in the oouni try. The piv.-i nt superintendent is Lien- ' tenant Thomas 1). McAlpiue, a wouudj ed veteran of the Second Massachusetts
j infantry.
A Di-nl of Lying.
Taking up my line of march westward, four miles brought me to Salem church, which still bears marks of Sedgwick's battle, and thence 1 visited in turn Chancellor house, the Jackson monument and the location of the various headquarters of the generals of the Eleventh corps, about which there has been so much dispute. To satisfy my own mind I estimated the distance from house to house and from General Dev eu’slino to the woods from which Stonewall Jackson issued. lam forced to one of two conclusions, both very unpleasant—cither I am entirely incapable of understanding an official account of a battle or else there has been a deal of frightful ly ; ug about Chaucellorsville. Anil 1 think I may say, as Congressman Walker of Massachusetts said in his last Speech on the banking bill, that “I am not tho stupidest man in the world ei-
ther. ”
I do not know how many miles it is northwest fiom tlie Jackson monument to Gerinauuu ford, for one is compelled to walk a long way round, bnt not far south of the ford I found tlie open region where Grant began his long :’.::d bloody buttle. And, what interested i::e equally us much, I found gold mining
They M«y Be » Precursor of a Change In This Country—They Already Begin to Droop New Wal.ts A Carton. Pair of
Sleeve*.
tSix-oial Correspondence. 1
New York, July 8.—How to reconcile two facts has puzzled more than one person when those facts sc. m to op- ,
nose each other completely. Iain think WMmxh. I'ni No. is. Knl* k-i i„„
ST«t
as they have been seen in Pans, in* dining cars. N.-w coiioho. < SkU in of the styles them have appeared I mIm. r.r.
at their races and at several other of the functions where the new styles are always shown first, and they have worn skin tight sleeves, with a tiny little
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-0I1OUJS-VIIU NEWAlBMTtCHi-Icoii
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In situated on Lnko >1.1: nUactree, Indiana, In a >cautiful park of 80 a-ror., cunt luhiK campus, lino jounefor cavalry practice,track for blcyt i and iprtntinK nurev, lawn f* unia ami bn;4vi b.'. 11 ^roumlA, irynmaMuin [70x80 feetj, six flu vh u artraian wells. The lake Ih one of tho nitist beautiful In the United States, covers an urea of 10 square miles, Is wholly fed by sprinfrn.hns tionutiful gently sloping tandy beach, and is a most popular mid pleasant
landy beach, and Isa most popular mid pleasant dimmer re soil. afToniinj opportunity for all kinds
)t aquatic sports.
tdemy and Dormitory building Is complete irticulur.cMtircl/ imw.A rr.I.Y
if aquat in spi
Tho Academy and Dorm
nevery particular,entirely rt v., \ :
FIUE I*ROOF, Miiblt. I in I. r<l wood,he:;tiMl by ‘team, lighted by elect:. ity. ha.J botaml cold water baths,lavatories, ami all . ilct nonvenlonees. The course of study tbor«M:f*lily prepares cadets for college, scicntiUo dehooU, business, West Point
<ir Annapolis.
The Academy is under the supervision of a West Point graduate and ex-army o! leer of large experience in teaching, who will have direct control of
tho discipline of tho cadets.
For further Inf mint ion and catalogue address, 4 ii I % or .TliliCjiry Acdutecay, Marmoiit, Ind.
KAN D I \C IKS ION
To
NIAGARA FA! LS,
Via
BIG FOl R ROUTE
TUESDAY, AUGUST 6th,
•-
WILDERNRB8 CHURCH. rustt'd b.iyonnts, and on ram occasions a moldcring skull and other bones From Germanna ford to Fpottsyltania Court House is one long battlefield. Ali the land is still aglow with the romance of the conflict, and owing to the poverty of the soil, which is f >r the most part a reddish clay thickly sown with coarse iron gravel and white flint stones, ninetciiths of the country remains exactly as
the armies left it.
In theiniuds of the old residents every hill has its tragic story and every hollow itscascof remarkable escape or recovery from dreadful wounds. In every scclud- j ed nook noted men died, at every spring they point out where tho wounded | crawled by scores into the stream in tho agonies of thirst, in every thicket they find the seeno of some savage hand to hand encounter, anil everywhere they point out how the tide of battle oblied and flowed and how all these slopes and hollows, now so peaceful, were then the theater of wholesale, continuous and re- j ciprocal murder. Every house is a mu- I suura. Every matron who was then a ' maiden has her own story of finding and j aiding some wounded man, and many of i them lovetotell how the soldier return- j ed long years afterward and renewed in | pe;ico the acquaintance thus made.
Across Country.
I have said that one could walk all day in one general direction upon breast- j works, but I should add that he would frequently have to crawl or cut his way through tangled vines and low hanging brush, for the central part of the great ! battlefield, extending seven or eight j miles southward from the road which ; runs duo westward from Fredericks- j burg, is rightly named tho Wilder- I ness. As I walked slowly southward through this forest I emerged occasion- j ally upon a little opening where the line of old locust trees and an occasional i post indicated a former dwelling house. | yard and garden, but all around were j breastworks or rifle pits, and the ragged ; and sickly appearance of the locusts i showed that they had barely survived their many battle wounds. Here and | there, too, is a depression containing a j few acres of fertile land and the rude ! cabin of a negro family, from which the i children rush out, not Unlike scared rab- | | bits, I*) gaze at tho passing stranger in i a way that clearly shows that visitors 1 an' rare. I confess to a considerable fear of the dogs, of which each negro family
j owns from 2 to 15, and quit.' ns much her any rur.fl region where tho i of the very long horned cattle which tone of living is higher. The d
browse in the woods, for this is the sea-
■1P» 'fi
MSTS FOR YOU NO LADIES
flare at tho wrists, and this fill' d in with line lace. All the upper part of the sleeve lirs as tight as a jersey. One lady remarked to another that she thought those n< >v sleeves were positively indecent. So far the only indication of the change we have seen over here is that the sleeves do not stand up as high as they have done, but owing to rite stiff and flat shoulder pieces and caps they are wider out thau they were. The Louis XVI modes are coming in, they say, and that menus tigdit upper and flowing under sleeves. For myself I shall be sorry to see the leg o’ mutton sleeve depart, for it has been a boon in many ways. It makes a stout figure look slender by comparison, and the young and too slim girl manages to look a iH'rfeet
figure by its deceptive aid.
There are numbers of ways of draping the gigot sleeve, one of tin* latest being the muskmelon, where it lies in ridges us if nature had arranged the slices. It all depends upon th" way the plaits are laid in. The modus operaudi cannot be explained, but the dressmaker can understand it by a reference to the pictures of the sleeves. There is one consolation—it will be easier to cut the sleeves down to the smaller dimensions
thiui it has been to build them up.
Waists are very ornate, but once in awhile one stumbles across a neat and compact design that is immensely pleasing. One had a plain short basque finish with a V vest of thin silk. This was gathered to a sharp point, and on eacli side was a pretty ornament of passementerie, with steel beads. The gown was gray and black cheviot. On the shoulders and across the bust there was more of the steel passementerie and more over the coral pipk vest. The sleeves to this were gigots, and the folds were laid in deep and in such a
way as to show broken lines.'
Other sleeves there are too numerous to mention, but I shall speak of two styles of sleeve in vogue for summer gowns. One has puffs with the fullness gathered up in places under funny little bows, with pert rabbit ear ends. There was a gown of polka dotted lavender sicilieime, tho skirt plain and the sleeves with these upper ballooulike puffs. The forearm part had a little frill of lace. The waist of the dress was
In effect *r.n<1ny, Mn- i :
north bous'd.
No 4’ Clbcajto Mall No 6" *• F.xpress No 44t Local
SOUTH BOUNK
No If IxjulSVllle Mall . No 5* Southern Express
No Hit Local
• Dully, t Except simdii,
I'ulltnun sleeper. ;m nlaln ti iiins illnlntr cars on day trains Foi
cards and toll Inrorinntion In r, ,, , :l,, through cars, etc., address "faiit i J. tti Ki*. i;. p. ' ,l " Al "". VANDAUA line. Trains leave ..reencastie, ind. in * i
la. 18«r. " 'i»tj
FOR THE WEST.
Ex- Sun MM a m. for -t |y,„i. 1’aily 12:2.; a I „ .
.12:25p.n. t ", I;!’ ;
No tr. No 7 No 1 No 21 No 3 No 3
1:33 |> m, tor -t I....
v-i'
Daily Daily. Dally.
Kx ■ sun 5:28 p ,n. to, Terre It.,,.,
rOB THE EAST *“h.| Ex. Sim. ... s ; 4ii h |o r
Daily 1:35 ,, •• “'•""fut
Daily 3:35 p in, •• Kx. sun 6:17 pm, “ Dally 2:;e.u in, •• Dally 4:30a in •• Daily fl:0:t p ni •• I’EOUI A III \ Islov
Torre Haute.
7:05 a in. lor i
.. , , Bfi5 p ic for PeetjL] lor eiiin|d< to time eai-d, iri. ,. , ' anil stations, and for full bu. , mm,,,' ?!
runs, through curs, etc., add re-
W.F Hhunner J ®- :
Asst. Gun’l I’ass. A y t. >t. Louis
No 4 Noun No M
I No Irt
No 1U No 8 No 2
NoTbKx Sun.
No7’ y “
B. I-. cI0SL3N I Ian Tea the lllgncst '..rad' Rra/.il u j
And the ttest I’ttt sburgh and Antlinnitec. yard opposite VandnlK 11 eight, iti
in active and. according to the miuois, | simply gathered, but over the bust there very successful operation. ; was draped surplice fashion some very The idea of there being rich placer i rich whito lace. This avus held together mines in tins part of the world was one on the shoulder by two fancy rhiuestoue I found it hard to accept, but the men pins, and another held tlx' center of the
certainly are getting out gold, and they say that they are making much bettor wages than they could at anything else tuid think with proper machinery an
immense product could be returned. Just south of tlie places is a sort of oasis in the general barrenness—half a doacn or more good farms, covering perhaps 1,000 acres of cleared land. In it
bow at the belt. I^lio belt and bows were garnet colored. The lace extended below the belt several inches in a jabot. The whole gown was dainty and sum-
mery.
Another curious if not beautiful pair of sleeves were appendages of a tasteful summer gown. This was of rose colored taffeta striped with black. The skirt
are the original Wilderness store and was plain and quite long in the back, postofflee, and at the west end of the though not even a demitrain. There Chancellorsville battlefield is the old was a po ket in a come-at-ahle place,
Wilderness church which first gave name to the region. That church is still
and on the opening was a double shir ring of ma’ze silk muslin, with a row
JULY is the time to buy coal cheap] FOR CASH Stove sizes Best Ahthr.irite $5.8" Furnaces ” " $5.7 Best Brazil Block Coal, 7to6; per bushel. Kindlings, 1 5 bundles, $1. Place your order with DANIEL KELLEY.
G.'
SMYTtlE. M. D. No. 25 Vine St.
\\l W. TU< Klili. M.lj /V -31(1 F. W.i-himM DUS. SMYTH K& I I ' Klili. I’hysiciuns and Siii'g' oii>, No. 17 Vine St. Gr > immSIlW
lillllib
in*
worth visiting, for it is an almost per- 1 of wax pearls in the center. The waist feet reproduction of the old English was plain in the back, bnt down the country church and surroundings. There | front there were one double and two are tho same groves and heavy sward; j single rows of shirred muslin, thooeuter a solemn, restful quiet; secluded walks , one having a row of the beads. Between and rustic gateway, which seems a each of tho shirrings was a band of thousand years old. It is said that the ! moss green velvet ribbon ending in original church was built in 1 7 76, bnt loops top and bottom. Tho sleeves were it has been so extensively repaired that j complex affairs. At the top were three it maybe called new. ! rows of clo-o shirring in a sort of shell
Here, as in many other places in Vir-
ginia. I am very much struck with the contrast between tho country and the people. Two-thirds of this county consists of land which our western farmers would call “scandalously poor,” and yet the comitry people live remarkably well. In fuel, I do not just now remem-
general j
if living is higher. The dwellings are neat and the surroundings generally |
form to stand out like caps. The rest was shirred lengthwise and puffed, and between each puff was a row of beads.
, i sou when young calves are lying around, I attractive, tlie food is of tho best ami |
At the foll.wing exceedingly p<.pularj iui( i it i8 the custom of a “scrub” cow : well cooked, and, unlike the western!
whose calf is disturbed to hook first and
consider the matter later.
Many romantic stories are told, of which one interested me very much. A Massachusetts soldier who carried a gold watch fell wounded baside an iimnens.
.Ilcmon Kxcurftion.
Special t^cumon to Mirhi^nn ('i’y Niagara Fall* ? Wednesday morning, July 21. Very !'“keUhmRauquk::V. .;:! ]!.!!'! 5Jk! i low rat* 1 . Toronto 6 50! Bainbridge fair July 29 to Aug. 2. Thousand Islands 10.50 one and one third fare. Special trains Round trip, will be run between ‘ rawfordsville and Otif patrons know the excellent qualCloverdalc Aug. 1 and 2 at half fare ity of these excursions via the "Big r it e , | Four,” which is tlie natural route to ,, , , the falls via Buffalo. Elegant Wagner! a 1 ' 1 ' 1 1 . '' ^ sleeping car accommodations will be,
to 12, one and one third fare. j provided for all. Solid trains of parlor the place, and the log had decayed so New Albany, Ind., Aug. 6 and 7. Red cars and coaches run through without slowly as to keep the ground under it
Men’s powwow, half fare. i change.
Denver, Col., Aug. 11 and 12, half For full particulars call at once on F. fare. J. A. M.ohakl, Agt I ^ lleU8tU ’ ,l « ent Bi k r Follr - Grccncas-
fann.Ts, tho people generally have secured for themselves such luxuries as ice, the finer kinds of standard groceries and other things usually found only in towns. There is a general air of refinement, and in many of the houses one
log on the highest satlfl ‘ridge. Seeing finds considerable libraries. Here, howtliat his command was retreating, he ever, as everywhere else in the south, buried his gun and Watch under tho log. I notice that the books are old standard When the great reunion was held here a | English, with very rarely indeed any of few years ago, ho succeeded in finding i the late novels or scientific works.
J. H. Beadle.
The Banner Times—10c,
1*
t le.
i E. O. McCormick, a week ! Pass. Traffic Mgr.
D. B. Martin, Uen’l P. A T. A.
quite dry. He found his watch in such good preservation that it resumed business after being cleaned, and the writing on the paper he wrapped round it was still partially legible. The stock of Sis i^nn. however wascoimilefelv rotted
There is a peculiar superstition attached to the London theaters that should any one whistle in the dressing room the actor or actress nearest the
M§> il
Don’t insist that the old nttl'-t your grandfather bought .•imi iK' 1 ' come down to you as an hcii'lniw 11 good as tlie modern piano. In tin- '• of your grandfather then 1 were about a dozen piano m:muf , i r ! |i with only about a dozen idea-"Mj 1 - constriictiou. Now there an'ln ||,,f and as many modern idea-, fin i'Dh keen and inventive men who niaH. S7VYITH & 1SIXOIS PlS N Compel the prejudiced puldh' !"* tlie superiority of Hit - Beauty, h i- better, ini ter, than tlo-oUl fos-ilyom gnmi Itought. No time like the pn'sent ern ideas predominate in the Wonierful Smith (k Nixon I'iJ Gome in and see them wIntf'L' wish to buy or not—we’ll h.l : conrteonsly. F. G. New house. Wareroom, 17 S. Indians^'
% 4 /1 N It coiitUHes tt'« jtorea'lt ■ ’ the faci.’, you ha.l Better -• • * > I' you r »$»»•• i with nnir of unectH' 1 •
SUMMER TOILETS.
The forearms were of tlie taffeta and had frills of white chiffon, the under part hanging down tAvice as deep as the
door will lose his or her position at the / » u ‘ iH a ( * lialut un( ^ idea, but theater. | very becoming to any one.
Oi.ivr Harorr,
The largest Stock of
liOLi) SPEffl
Ever brought to
the Countr]
Do not trust your eyes to P
tilers or Jewelers.
G. W. BENG
‘-Si-lyr-e. c. <v.—41-ly r - ei °'
