Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 12 October 1889 — Page 2
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Vot. i... NO. 69.
AX INIiKKENDEXT N'KWSPAPKR,
PKBUCATIOX OFFICE
No. 23 South Fifth Street.
Term of Subtcripik/n
One year —..... tvr week, by carrier
AXTKI.I, WHH named lor the Stijienntendeut of public school* at Independence, Iowa. There ic a thread of deHtiny in this, Find, the name of the town is nigniticant', second, is* the connection with our public school western which Iwat* any in the world. Ax tell couldn't fail to win.
TMK crowd at the ipera House last night almofit made one believe he was away from home, there wen: no many strangers. The regular theatre goers of the city having had two delightful evenings of the legitimate this week are waving themselves up for Emma Abbott on the -1st. in the Hosts of Castile.
Hotki, proprietors h:*ve scoured the neighborhood in their locality for the jflUt few nights trying to secure beds for their overflow of guests. All their own beds weit! occupied, every available space tilled with eot« and scores of weary people waiting in the parlor* and lobbies who had not whete to lay their head. All on account of the races.
11ok*k-s'|.k*u cohick high but we must have it. One hundred and live thousand dollars seems a good deal to put into an animal that may die
spring
of
or
tarv fund. 1 hey would never allow the
{waw. The Saemiuento jwilice must sess gtxnl cttMlit, or thev wouM haw to takv one another to the station houw for
Kttrd and lodging.
follow the ure is certain, why dtx« not Mr. I lylnarger permit a final vote to be taken'1 It is sakl that a number of the more prominent saloon keeper* want the Ikx'iise Wut the councilmen tell them they at** a!raid of the stnaH fry, kangarvto affair* in the outskirts of tbe It i» this very element tliat rtuiw the usefulm** of
itv, of the
it in tiie «»rimf that a ehuss af men ait*
5^ !3rrrrr
T\ rr NVWS I THE German papere report the people l-^xvi-l 1 -Tu |gg receiving the Czar very coldly and without enthusiasm. There is nothing
,c.,i regiment of soldiers and every step must Pmilstieil Every Altemoon Excepl Sunday,
..SS 00 ,.10cts
KU corre#pondence*boold be addressed the VXWH PUBLISHING COMPANY. No attention will be girea to annonymou# communication*.
The New*' column* will be open to contributors upon any auhjeet of special or general interest. No communication inspired by ill-feel* jug or of a personal nature will be pabliabed.
Rejected manuscript will not be returned unit?** accompanied by pottage. i'emoru desiring to subscribe for tbe N*«r» can do *o by telephone or postal card request.
Specimen copies furaUhed apou application. Where delivery f* irregular, immediate complaint *hould be made at the office and it will receive prompt attention.
Remittances should be made payable to THK NrvM im-bmshlvc company. JWHVJLAS If. SMITH,
Managing Editor,
«T TKf.fcrHOXK So. 1M. mr Reader* of tbe Ijaii.v Nkwh leaving tbe city at any time ran have the paper mailed to them. Address will be changed a* often a* de5red.
S ATI' RI)A Y, K.'TF JIER I-', I.WI.
I'oi it oi the Tcrre Haute .-ir Knight* arrived home yesterday. Eighteen went by way New York. The rest will he here a« noon a*t they can stand the journey.
TIIKKC in »NE European cuhtom that will never, no never, htain a place in this country, and that i* the hahit of the men to embrace and ki»* each other. Our American men ean do better and they worn a taste tint would permit Mich a waxte of good material.
a cold before
receive a disabling injury at the
next nice or be killed in a railroad wreck on the llrst journey. However, then1 is a certain amount of risk in all investments, and there is a'chanee that Axtell may pay for himself and make handnome dividends for his owners.
THK Indiana Woman SutlYnge convention, which closed its session at Kushville In^t evening, was wagged and captured by that astute wan I politician and wirepuller, Mr*. Helen M. (tougar, who forced herself upon the association as president for another year. Mm. May Wright Newall, chairman of the Incentive Committee, Mi. Ida A Harder, Slate Secretary, and Miss Mary E. Card* will. Superintendent ot Proas, received a large ballot for re-election, but all declined to serve. An will
Strange about this. When a man is so offensive that he must be guarded by a
l)t. protcctol
,)V
NEWS PUBLISHING CO., I which the entire population is excluded 'land the house filled with de-
gnra an1 bay0„.t,
by the— an opera is given for his benefit from
1
should thing you we
Ik* for Ihv pi,«. in few l*» 11 1 vonr speos magnity. oh, yes, said days, the old lady, "thev magnify a little."
Tun police of Sacramento have Ikmij 5 ^'tnrnedlhe laH, 1 wad jist ... ... hke if ve wad take them atf when ye re without pay for mx months. Now tt U-nuh,^* mv Exchange. their council had the enterprise of ours they would wijn4 out this debt with a stroke of the |veu« They would issue illegal scrip or city warrants, which would be returned hy the treasurer iin-j uVnst have i^'n an epidemic of paid for want of funds or orders which suicide here some time or other." nobody would discount, or they would "How's that? l»orrow motiev to no the sewer and eenie- ',v
An
Tuv^k citizens who want a saloon li»x»n*«e wuUl not employ a leisure hour on Sunday in ainon* righteous ttinw than bv interviewing the Council men of their, trudged honw» from an evening party. waol on this subject The N kws prediets
the council and the citittrns must to writ** me Unit he Us }Hliceman. an baa
when
tachments of the regular army it can hardly be expected that the people will be very exuberant. The two emperors may pledge the mutual peace of their nations in generous bumpers of wine, but they can not control the sentiment of the people. In Germany the resentment of despotism is deep seated, but of necessity undemonstrative. In Russia it finds expression in open revolt and dynamite. If the Czar wants a warm reception, let him go home, where it undoubtedly awaits him.
WHEN Terre Haute sees anything she wants, she takes it and is satisfied only with the very best. We have had the finest races ever given in the west outside of Chicago. The visitors all agree that we have some of the best hotels in the country'. No finer weather was ever furnished for any occasion. The record of the world was beaten on our race track. And now to cap the climax and carry off the belt, we have secured Axtell. Warren Park will become known throughout the .racing circles of the country as the home of this celebrated horse. It cannot be denied that there are some objectionable features connected with the races and they are greatly deplored by conscientious peopie, but in a business sense there is no doubt but thev are an advantage to the city. They attract large crowds from all part.* of the country, thev increase trade by bringing in excursion* and in many ways they advertise the city. Our people nhould co-op-rate with the directors of the Association to make next year's races an improvement even upon the very successful meeting just concluded.
IT MAKES US LAUGH.
A heartless punster remarks that London society has been a good deal cut up bv Jack the Hipper.
Servant Maid- Madam, the doctor! Utdy (who is having a delightful call from a neighbor)—It is imp issible to receive him now. Say that 1 am ill!—San Francisco Wasp.
Mumley '.on the yatcli .-- There goes my watch overboartl! I'umby -Never mind it's only a Watwburv. Mumley Yes, (»ut I've lost time by dropping it, all the same. Kxchange,
Confectioner and Ice Cream ManWe'll lose ten of our best customers next week. Assistant -We will! Are thev going Oklahoma? "No they are going to get married." -Exchange.
Young Wife—A eh! hew fortunate I am in jos8essing a husband who always sta^s at home in the evening! Post on Friend—Yes your husband was never much addicted to pleasure!—Fliegende Blatter.
Husband—My dear, the howling of that cat of ours is unbearable! 1 wish you would try to get rid of her.
Wife (drowsily)--Her month is up on Friday, and I'll send her away without, a character!
In the Witness Box—Judge,—You reside——? Witness With my brother. Judge -And your brother lives Witness- With me. Judge--Precisely but you both live—-? Witness -1 oget her, ICulenspiegel.
For !ee stings, lirsl quickly remove them, then apply liquid ammonia, saleratus, tincture of iodine, kerosene oil, salt and soda mixed and moistened with water, cold, bathing with camphor internally, and then decide which is lest.
Fond lover (after long-delayed propos-al)—--"Perhaps I've been too sudden, darling." Darling girl regaining her composure with an effort -Yes, Ceorge, it is very, very sudden, but (and here she iMTaine faint again it is not too sudden." "Will you please hand the milk, Miss Brown'.*" asked a young man of a fidgety old maid at the supper table. "Do you take me for a waiter, sir?" she answered. "Well," he added, *'as no one has taken vou thus far, and you've waited so very long,
IT
one.'1
A school-boy in the sixth standard, getting his I o'clock lunch prepared for
official statement him bv his grannv. looked up in the old
EmocMte Sows
Time
ok
,, ,, women on the streets toniav with terrible
Other.
"I've noticed one funny thing alout this tow n," said a trave!int man to a native of the l^lmer Hoits»% n-centlv.
,norn a
Mmni on th,,ir nwk UH|er
city to wl under the disgrace of not ear. as if iheir thnvits had been cut and InHtig able to pay the gtwuxliaus of her then healed up. Attempts at snieide,
®.a,
the left
ptohably." "Suicides**** eiarulatctl the Chicagti nuui, in dij^ust. "Well, you are alnmt the freshest sj»eejinen I wen lately*. Thow are mosquito bite* Kxehansn\
0«o«*t OctoN ro Answer hi*.
"What did you want to make ,*uch a Sgfvooe of vonmdf for over that little mouse?" Ke said to hb sister as they
015
nc''.':
and j**rea»ned nntil I
was asltamei! of you. 1 was afraid of!
tour votem in the affirmative, eight in the, uHrge," murmured the girL **Afrakt negative, unless some of the member*^ Soumtm*' If you hadn't had on low the prm«dent of going out of a pair ©f new French shows and striped fact thai
hfv«
afraid of it. She didn deign to answer} borhood, aad wjlungljr wet
New York Sun.
Nonmta to Do. -v \,
LITTLE GIRL ON THE WALL.
Now the daylight is dose, and the curtain* ar« drawn, And the katydids sing all alone on the lawn, And my little one's cries, as she comes at my call: "Can't I play with tbe little black girl on the wall
Tho' she's dollies that cry and a dog that can bark, A Manx cat and a fully equipped Noah's ark. What delighted her most, ever since she could crawl. Has been what she calls the black girl on the wall.
"Tit bedtime, and Bessie, oar one little lamb. Comes bleating: "O, mamma, I'm lonely, I am I Ftb no brothers nor sisters—I've no one at ail Bat that dear little darliag black girl on the 'waU! '"1 don't see her by daytime—O, wfiere does she go? Bat at twilight she follows me—now to and fro— Wherever I turn, and if I get a fall, Why, then, down goes the little tyack girl on the wall! ..
"Mamma, what does she eat, and, Ol what does she drink. And what does she do all day long, do you think? Now she's little like me and next minute she's tall, But I never can catch that black girl on She wall!*'
So our pet prattles on. wken she's in for a race With her shadow. ^OI Isn't life just suob a chase?) And she dances like mad down the Are-lighted hall As she hunts for the little black girl on tho wall.
near
Mr. Leidy was silent for a long time. Ho Raid then: "Walter, I have almost determined to refuse the call to Pittsburgh, and to give myself up to work among these people. The board will send me as a missionary." "It is very good in you, Mr. Leidy, but it is impossible. The board pays its city missionaries ouiy the wages of a laboring man, and you have no idea what it costs t« livehereS* Very different from Coalton." "Ishould go down among the laboring men and live as they V," said Mr. Leidy. "If I ara to help them, must be with them. Besides, there may be a certain help to them in seeing how an educated man would live on the sarao income as their own." "I fear you will find example a slow means of gnico, Jaint'S," said Mr. Cobbett. "If I cat interest my people, we ean make a tremendous united assault upon the alums. Working-men's clubs, industrial schools, societies for boys, young women and mothers. I have a dozen ideas."
When he was alone with his wife he said "Poor Jim! I feel he will be sorely disappointed in that Quixotic venture. I wish he bad tueh enginery as ours to bring to bear upon tbe foires of evil!"
Never did two meu attack the forces of evil with more earnest faith or tender pfity for ill-doer* than these two young clergymen. Btti their methods ot attack were widely different.
James I*nd\ when appointed city missionary, rented two moms over a bakery down in the Neck. One was his sieepingroom in the other be he service, taught school, and in the evenings welcomed tho teen and boys who came there to road tho papers or to offer tfeera advice*' He reached them one by one. The baker. Ous JV:helling, a drunken, good-natured fellowr, was bia first ally. He deplored to James the "a lot of half-grown boys waa in thai nelgtavreni to work to entice tbens to the honse that they might be inverted. A ainging-clab was the band by whkh James held them together. Itw-
,va
lot. of haif-gt
iSitrkit Via InslaudI—^hure iTlI1o?n*f months t« win them to decent xnj* **•'«»HsssnsaXL*
*^rn^'r,srr«oo,k theaameas hero, loathe fatiters, shrewd tnechanx* who! PatrK'k No, mdswe: roe brwuier MoiKr r^Upo* as "wimnea'a buai-1
BeM(
'..«*ha**d on ammer ana}
in H.cspnn* uiat a ai men an acrwt the and often bat alisrht, and led to put in ortloe who are not the etvatui** af, orangm an' nuts an" IsMjanas^—New Vothing. Bat the worst thief or «ot usually I tUw "infiuencv." Y»»rk Weekly. ^UUk *om* feeling far lua son, iifed a respectf
er
TERftE HAUTE DAILY NEWS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12,1889.
—Boston Globe.
TWO WAYS.
Which Do You Think Was More Practical?
the
Rev. Walter Cobbett was called to a large and fashionable church in Philadelphia about twelve years ago. He was a young, sickly man, in deadly earnest in his wofk. In factvbis youth, pallor and fiery zeal gave a force to his words winch neither his thoughts nor character possessed for he was but a shallow thinker, and easily led by strong-willed companions.
The committee sent by the Ritteubouse Square Presbyterian Church to find a pastor discovered him by
some
odd chance in a
mining village near Pottstown, and were srreatly impressed by liis eloquence. They were all rich, shrewd men, fond of the good things of life, from music to a perfectly cooked dinner. "But," said Judge Lowe, "we don want a speculator or b»n vivant, like poor old Dr. Cray, in the pulpit airain. This young fellow is godly and full of zeal a great orator. He not only knows in what he behews, but he will make us all believe it.''
When Mr. Cobbett, with Alilly and the baby, came up from Coalton, Mrs. Lowe and the other fashionable womeu were delighted with the simple, unwordlv flavor of their speech and manner.
4'So
hke the
earty Christians," Miss Agnes Lowe said, who was an artist, aud therefore an authority on all early matters. They were invited to a round of dinners and receptions, and then Mr. Cobbett settled down in earnest to his work.
Young Leidy, one of his college chums who had just been ordained, spent a week with him, and the two men together tramped through the worst quarters of the city, from Naudain street to St. Mary's. They were both sympathetic, excitable and unused to the miseries of a great city. They went from the .filth and laziness of the quarter given up to''Dagos," to the negro slums, and from them to the vast mills, in which most of the operatives were saucy girls of from twelve to twenty years old. At night they discussed these scenes together. "Nothing was so terrible ihe," said Walter, "as those wretched Italians, content like animals to lie filthy and starving the aun all day." "The mill women seem to me the more desperate case," said James Leidy, "because they have sloughed off the brute. They are sharp and intelligent. They flaunt out in the evenings, each with her beaded dress and pinchbeck jewelry, going with 'her gent' to the quarter-dollar sociables or variety theaters. They eome so
to respectability and usefulness, and yet are going straight to ruin!" "My church must go to work at once," said Mr. Cobbett.
He spoke with a certain assurance of success. Tho membership of his church was so large and could number so many millions! Such a great broom would surely Boon clean these Augean stables 1
tzzzzjsx
beggars wbo^e «m!y trade was trick* I
s*fcwo-keeper*and profesiskmalthieves.
tar the man who was trying to pullhs)oy up, especially when the man proved to be a wide-awake, keen fellow, not to be imposed oa by them.
The mothers were more easily reached and less easily held. They cried grateful tears when they met the good minister who bad made Sam a respectable boy, or kept Joe out of Movamensing they came to the Wednesday evening service, and sang the hymns with loud fervor. Sometimes James suspected that they were just as drunken, as slatternly and as vicious in their homes as before. But he had hardened himself against disappointment. In some fashion those peopie gradually took him and his teaching into their homes and lives. They sent for him to marry them, to get them out of jail, to bury their dead when the diphtheria raged in Pin Court, "Parson Leidy" was called in before the doctor, he being just at hand, "and such a famous nurse." Tom Farrel, when he was sentenced to death, and urged to call in a minister, "reckoned that Leidy was the best of the lot and the grim Scotch weaver, Sampson, came to him in the dead of the night to tell him, with stern eyes and quivering jaw, bis suspicion that his little Aggy was goiag to the bad. "Dear, dear! James this is disheartening," said Mr. Cobbett, when he came down to visit his old chum. "You have been living here like a paui^r for a year, and what have you accomplished? But three communicants! No hope yet of building a chapel!" "1 am coming nearer to them every day," said Leidy. "I make myself one with them. 1 try to drag them up, step by step." "These little individual efforts of course suffer by comparison with great organized work," said Mr. Cobbett, with a slight tone of patronage. "Now, when our church begins her assault upon outside vice, you will find the moral atmosphere in this part of the city cicar up very rapidly." "What are your plans?" "In the first place, organization. I have drilled my people ready to work. We are going to have a sewing-school, a mission Sunday-school, au industrial school for the boys, a working-man's ciub, a mother's association, a young girls' guild for mutual improvement, societies for the promotion of temperance and personal purity. These are ail to be superintended by the members of the church. It would gratify you, James, to see how zealously the most fashionable matrons and gayest girls take hold of the idea. They are eager to begin." "And who are the people on whom they are to work?'' "Who*" Mr. Cobbett waved his hands widely. "All the thieves, Magdalens, disjharged convicts, paupers! None will be turned away. Our machinery is complete. I can not but believe, James, that the reform .licit we .sua!I accomplish under God will be vo"v great." "Wher oegin, Walteri" "As so 11 .ir church building is completed. It is cost eighty thousand dollars." "That is a large sum." "The lot cost us thirty thousand. But it was a great bargain. It is in the rear of the church, in the most desirable part of the town. Wo could sell it now for double that sum. It will be the oiost complete building for parish work in the country. There wift be apartments for all the schools, a library, gymnasium, reading-rooms, all perfectly equipped. We have fifty thousand subscribed. The remainder comes in slowly. You do not look satisfied, James. I thought you would rejoice in this great movement." "How are you going to bring the thieves and paupers up into your great building*" said Leidy, abruptly, "it stands in- the most fashionable quarter. They live miles away from it. The mountain will not go to Mahomet." "We shall see, my dear sir," said Mr. Cobbett, with a complacent laugh. "I am surprised at Leidy," he told his wife, afterwards. "He suggested a trifling, difficulty as a block to our whole work."
When Mrs. Cobbett heard what it was she said, with an uneasy look: "I had thought of that."
A year later Mr. Leidy dined with the Cobbetts, and weut to a church meeting afterwards. It appeared to him that the relations between pastor and people were strained. Mr. Cobbelt urged vehemently the payment of forty thousand dollars still due on the scsiool building. The women of the church had been working energetically to that end.. They had held fairs, strawberry festivals and bazars of all nations. They had given concerts and organ recitals. They had gone from house to house soliciting subscriptions. "Now," said Judge Lowe, "the fact is that they are tired. The building was much more costly than was expected the whole energy of the church lias been directed into paying for this huge structure and for the appliances for teaching the dangerous
classes
while, as we all know, the
dangerous classes do not come to be taught. My opinion is that Ave had better sell out the whole concern, pay off the mechanics who havo liens on it, and give the remainder of the money to foreign n^ssions.
Mr. Cobbett quickly brought up some other snbject for discussion. Judge Lowe met him when the conference was over, and laughed as he saw his pinched, anxious face. "I'm sorry I worried you," he said. "But I tell you, Mr. Cobbett, liis fad of yours is a deadweight,. The church can not carry it. We have made a mistake somehow," he said, turning to Mr. Leidy. "The wretchedly poor will not come to us. They like the privacy and darkness of their holes, like rats. The classes are filled with the children of well-to-do mechanics, who can afford to have them taught at ordinary schools. The. ladies collected a number of jnill girls, who came two or three times in fine clothes, and spent their time in staring at the gowns and hats of their teachers. As soon as they bad displayed their own finery and learned the latest spring fashions they dropped off. I found nix young ladies assembled to teach the seikon's daughter yesterday. The whole thing is a failure."
When the two clergymen were back in tiie study Walter turned to his frier:d. "Why*should it be a failure!" he said, passionately. "These people need help, and we have it to give. Look, for instance, at the thousands ot deceived girls in this city. We are told that there is no way open for them but utter ruin or death. We open ways for them. We are ready to teach them book-keeping, china-panting, cooking—to give them a dozen honest means of support. Our ladies drive through the slams, find these women, give them good advice, and Invite them to comer But they will not
James Leidy said nothing. But as he walked home he remembered the months in which ha had followed poor Aggy Sampson, trying to help her—her father's agony, her member's tears, the prayera, the struggles, the patience which had been so long anavailing to save that onelost soul. She was cafe
BOW,
he thanked Ood, living happily
with the old people in Montana. Mr. Cobbett, meanwhile, sat despondent and thoughtful over his study fire. He could sot understand what more than money, a cosSiy building and perfect appliances, «xvd oomwtteeA of ladies ready to give au boor each week to the good work, was needed to saatdb these brands from the horn iag. He has sot yet found an answer t^ tbe problem. -Oongregatfonaliat
MUSICAL. INSTRUMENTS.
PIANOS and ORGANS!
'#:ALL KINDS OF MUSICAL GOODS. '"S3?
j. irst-class Instruments Sold on Fasy Terms in Monthly or Quarterly Payments. For Terms. etc., call 011 or
Address
W.H.PAIGE & CO.,
c.41 Main Street, TEliKK HATTE. IN1. B-S.—Every Instrument fully warrantt?d to give perfect satisfaction.
J. T. H. MILLER,
Clothier, Merchant Tailor and Gents' Fur-1 nlslier, 522 Wabash Ave., Near 6th, North Side,
AN EARLY FALL1
J.
MANTELS.
A GREAT REDUCTION
-IN
A N E S
In order to make room lor exhibiting* line line ol' stoves
which we are carrying this fall, we will sell our stock of
MANTELS AND GRATES, at prices that will defy
competition. We also manufacture
Ornamental Galvanized Iron Cornices,
A N O S A E A N IN O O 1 O
MANION BROS.,
Indicate." the new fall otyie* are ill and w«- are ....
prepared with our fall aud winter overcoat*, all
5-
ft-
522 Wabash Ave., Near Sixth St.
WATCHES. AM .IEWELKY
674 Main StreeL
UFHOT^STERER«.
WALSH Ik SOUTHER LAND
No. 815 Main Street.
OLOT11IF.R. (ilSOCKUIKS.
N
the market affords.
wool, from $5 np. an«i *uit«-Jo suit all elawies, ai I price* to Suit everyboday. We invite jour in WnilSft furniShlllfir GOOCIS. sjwetlmt before making vonr purchase#. X1ULtOO 1 Ui \_4 UVUO, .Ka At Ix)west Prices, ('all on
r.
I New Silverware
JUKI received, elegant lineof Jewehy, weoud {to none in the city. At! good* were twagbt for __ spot cash and are Vin* «oHI at remarkably to* SeCOIld-Hand FlirilltUrO, I p»Jre«.
FIRST-CLASS WATCHES. nwi*.cumi!s«j.etc.. urr...t
DIAMONDS
same of the finest timepiece* in the city. NELSON'S, NO. 9 NORTH THIRD STREET.
\l price* that will «arpri«- ycm. An in«|*vOfm UNDERTAKERS AND EM BALMKH8. 5 .• fnHtmf.
DALE&STRANG,
TOWNLKY STOVE COMPANY.
DO YOU WANT
'Stou? or pun?a e,
TIK, SLATE OR IRON ROOFING.
MANTEL OR CRATE, TILE HEARTH. ESTIMATES FURNISHED,
v....,
iTOWNLEV STOVE "COMPANY,MS#:
W HOLESALK and RETAIL,
009 WABASH AVENUE,,
FURNITURE, STOVE#, ETC.
HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID I hths, -FOR-
Boa£KTK.ai.AAT,
Undertakers and Embalmers,
NORTH FOURTH BT., TERRS HAL'TK.
•dr All ealls w(U receire prompt atteatioa Open day and niffat.
COAX., ETC.
MS SMITH'S COAL OFFICE.
.,v riSiviU.
tv Jn
f":
'Is
CKINC
knoc
I'cre hi ft wits I rosso wire, recoi to
FRESH
At Joe Miller's (irocery, 515 Main street.
He liaa
CELERY, CABBAGE.
••Ami everything in llio vegetable line.
POULTRY.
Nothing escapes Mr. Miller's eye when
it comes to securing the best and freahesl
i«by 0
reman
•erel the hi iJoverri'
ftactthoanlongto
jtttnlM-rH result *H(i he part wi jdon hi pie, at 1 com
I ma\
jsil-ar bt
CHAP
illaliot it Won sty of IftHt Fri Bsmticl Jiad pr jo, to Kmmith iliseripi may vootril. fee attei {t he df jir meel firs in I
..
1
aiu- »r
liar
dly I of Orj bavii ty, 1
^aociety dona
~fi if'
the di
Tbr 4
i»l mar '[iabooti |l., on 1 faixtee pt to pai itute a lies foi
JAMS* A.
aimnrr
BI.AOK: A NISBBT,
4»
revt'fl Octol net
rnpan
