Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 6, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 December 1902 — Page 9
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3 X^V«f^^
TRAVELING MAN MAKES TERRE HAUTE AFTER 18 YEARS.
Notes REMARKABLE CHANGES
Mr. J. Hahn Tells Some Interesting Stories About the Early Days of Travel Here.
Eighteen years between trips is a longer time thiin the majority of drummers ^ce: but a man, registered at the Terre ^^jite house Sunday, hadt made bis flfet' trip to this city just eighteen years before. .1. II. Hahn commenced coming to Terre TTauto, to sell goods, in 18(57. Tor. seventeen years after that time he continued to come here regularly two three times a year. Then his visits popped and lie did not ngain return till #£hteen years after when he walked &t.o the Terre Haute, house Saturday H'SpU*.
Sfr. Hahn is a man of very wide experience. He has been on the road both in this country and in Europe for thirtytive years. •\Tcii actively enarncrd with their busicTess and social duties do not note the ftehanrres which gradually take place in of v.
When asked to (ell how Terre Haute nr^o'ired to the traveling1 public when 1\e fivst eauie here Mr. Hahn said: "Well, came to Terre Haute on the first trip ffvpr made for the purnose of selling «roods. had inst recently come to this .'y»int^y from Germany and had been -wr^pkino- for a tea house in "New York. ".ry l-nouledo-e of the Herman Innsrunere •mnd.e me a irood salesman amonrr the "TJermans and was sent out to call on +BJ$IT ebiw
of trade. came over here
fijf)m Tndianapolis the first time with a ii'ijin by the name of Charley Cook, whom some of the older merchants will remember, as one of the most popular salesmen in this region, at that time. There was only one. railroad then and the station was up there where the tracks cross the Main street. Tt was the same buildin,? which stands on that corner now, (the Van. freight house) but those big arches which are now boardted up to ffii'rn windows were then the doors of the structure and it was through those niches that we passed out into the street Tt-remember in walking up the street towards the hotels which stood on the sa^ne spot that this hotel now stands on. we passed very few buildings and flwe were $jnall. The hotel was a mis-•ru-nble excuse for a hostelry. I am not c-Jenr as to whether .it was a brick or afiwooden buildin.tr. but the thing that isg&Hrestpd me most at the time, was that one,' could neither get enough to eat.' nor., could he sret that little food of respeefable quglitv. Tn spite of .this fa# we were 'compelled to pav three dollars a day. just as if we h«d been stopping at good place. That hotel was so notoriously bad that all the traveling men if those days used to get in and out of Terre Haute iust as quickly as they possibly could, apd it was regarded as a calamity to be caught there over Sund::r On successive trips, I stopped at the Old National. Tt was cheaper (two dollars a, dlay) and liked it better. "The business portion of the city was then all to the west. This region about here was very sparsely built up, and indeed believe the hotel was called the Prairie house, nnnwd no doubt from the prairie on which it stood. sold goods Mo Mr. Hulma.n on that trip, and on •nearly eveiy successive trip. Tn those days there was only one city in the country. That was New York and the jobbers everywhere would scarcely think of buy in? their wares at nny other place than in the great market of the east. They would buy large quantities, to last them six months at a lime. "Tn regard to any specially interesting stories about the town at that time, my visits were of course always so hurried, and my acquaintence so limited that did not gather very much infpriTjiition an to the scandals, etc.. that •were afloat, nn^t.hose that I did get hold at the time I have forcotten. There ^vnr one rather amusing Filing occurred, Jjnwever. which came under my notice b^enuse of my being a guest. at the Old Rational hotel. One of my trips brought T«\c to Terre Haute just at the tiiPe that nude figure was placed for decorative ffoirr'oses on a bank buildinc" directly op•gpcito the hotel. I remembpr that many the good neople of the eitv were
very
rpMieh wrought up over the. indecency of pinciuff spch an adornment in such a conspicuous place, and the question of wheth ef or not. tt ousrht, to he (nkeii down,
,f THE MAN' BEHIND THE GtTKS. Is tile Chief Sector in Times of Wan This fact was proven in the lata Spanish-American conflict. The better the man beliifid the artillery, the more feuccessful the fight. Weak, poorly developed, nervous men make poor :|narksmen. Their shots fall short •jtheir aim fails defeat is made probable. It is the strong, nerveless man ill at *'put3" the successful shots.
It's the s$me in the battle of life. Food is the dependence of success. Prom it we receive the strength and intellect that makes possible our skill. We can be no better than the food wo $at, and poor food devejops poor marksmanship. It makes us fall short of our aim in life—even knovj the igiiomy of utter defeat.
Shredded Wheat makes the perfect "ipan behind the guns,v because of the fact- that we are made of what we eat. it in reality the food, through the medium of the man, that hits the mark. "Whole wheat is the most perfect food produced by nature, therefore Shredded Wheat, being: ^vhole wheat, easily digestible, is perfection itself. Its preparation makes it agree-' able to the taste and perfect in its Junctions as a health producer. Being substantial food, it makes perfect men and women. Naturally organized foods inake possible natural conditions. There is no other way.
Send for "The Vital Question," a free booklet published by the ^Natural Food Company of Niagara Palls, N. Y. ... It solves the life problem.
pi
was being gravely considered." This was the figure on McKeen's bank. "The Big Four railroad was built before I discontinued my visits here in 1884, and the city had very much, improved. There was however, no paving, and the hotels continued to be pretty nearly as bad as ever. You can readily realize then what a contrast this lias been for nre on returning. I left the depot in a 'bus that did not jolt one to pieces and rode over the smoothly paved streets, to a good hotel which looks after every comfort of its guests anid' most of all I stepped out on the street of what when last left it was nothing but a straggling country town and found in its place a wide awake hustling city and the progress of the United States was more plainly illustrated than could be done by all the orators in the country."
RED DEE^AND CARIBOiJ
Unexplained Antipathy of the Latter for the Former—Strange Story From Quebec.
The disappearance of caribou before the invading herds of red or Virginia deer is one of the puzzling facts of natural history. The red deer are not half the size of the caribou, yet it is. beyond dispute that even where the^latter exist in larger numbers they will rapidly disappear before the advance of the former.
Years ago, caribou abounded in the woods of northern Maine and in the province of Quebec. Then the graceful little red deer, driven North and West by the Avolves. gradually spread into the home of the caribou, and within a season or two the latter had become as scarce in their old home as the red deer previously had been. vV
On the other hand the north country of Canada, in the neighborhood of T«vke^ St. John and St. Maurice, which "former! j*. supported: vast herds of completely deserted by them^ f&r tri'a ny years past, though moose and caribou are plentiful. Equally far north in the Ottawa and Gatineou country, red deer and moose are found in very large numbers but no caribou.
Owing largely, it is supposed, to the increase in, the number of wolves, the range of the red deer is rapidly extending to the south and east, and specimens have been seen and billed in parts of the country north of Quebec where they had not been seen befme for more than a generation. The Indian and other old hunters are already fore! -Ming the disappearance of the caribou from this part of tie country, where they are at present very abundant-
There is a theory that the instinct of the caribou tells thent that an invasion of their feeding grounds by the d,eer is due to the pursuit of the latter bv wolves and that it is the hnrvor of thes^ fte°ts which leads thehi to forsake any..territory to which they sepni to know that their distasteful neighbors are fleeing for refuge: ,...
There are not wantinsr careful observers mnonsf Canadian woodsmen who attribute to jealously of the lit.tle Virginian deer at the afmroach of the matins season the action of the caribou in fleeing with his mate.from the comnany and the country of "his gay little rival. The problem is a most interesting one and is engaging the attention of many investigators.
ODD MOMENCLATURE.
Some Curious Names of Places in the State of Massachusetts. In the Middlesex fells some good old colonial names are preserved, like Jingleberry hill and Chillvshally brook. Spot pond was named by governor Winthrop, who discovered it in the winter, because of the many rocks that showed through the ice and spotted the surface. Powderhorn hill, in Chelsea, is said to have been bought of the Indians for a horn ful of powder.
The fact of misfortune to divers unknown persons—whether trivaj or not does not appear—finds a recSrd in BSd Luck mountain in Granville and T?q$! Luck pond in Douglas. There may fe some association between Rurncoat brook and pond in Leicester and Spencer and Bunishirt river, likewjsp in Worcester county. Drinkwater river is a felicitous name for a stream of good water. Tt is in Hanover and possibly there may have been n, family of tlia'v name in the neighborhood. Strong Water brook in Tewkesbury, has quite, different associations. Sought, For pond, in Westforrl, suggests a long and Med quest for the spot through the wilderness in the olden days. One of the least euphonious of names is Skug river in Essex and Middlesex counties. Tt. is worthy, a place among such Engfipli names as Wormwood Scrubs, park in London.
A legend about the names of the group of islands on the south coast presents an instance of how fancied resemblance gives rise to stories. Tt. is related that these- islands once belonged to a man with four daughters. To Nancy, the eldest, the father gave the first choice, and the fact thata
tf??on-took-it"
is re
corded in the name "Nantucket, the. island she selected. Nantucket, of course, is in ren'ity an Indian name. Martha's Vineyard and the Elizabeth Tslands went fact, "were named
foT
Queen Elizabeth
while to the fourth dansrhter, whose name has been lost to memory, there, was nothing1 left but' the most, remote en~d No Man's Land, because its owner and undesirable of the group, which was the town that comprises them.
A Quiet Roast. 1
}if refusing to grant a private interview to a certain politician who is always trying to give him advice and information on important matters of legislation, President Ilqosevelt is said to have remarked: "It is always most distressing to me to b.e obliged to talk to that luan. I find myself constantly expecting him to revert to his arboreal ancestors, grow a tail and swing gracefully from the chandelier without interrupting the conversation."^
SV^ $ v^*
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f-w-
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GIVE Hlltt
Being a list of
things that
men will appreciate-Divided off properly so one can select for the right party the right thing.
FOE QNE'S HUSBAND BROTHER OR NEAR RELATIVE.
HANDKERCHIEFS. SUSPENDERS. CRAVATS.
GLOVES.
UMBRELLAS. MUFFLERS.
SMOKING JACKETS. HATH R011E&. HALF-HOSE.
FOR ONE'S COUSINS AND OTHER FELLOWS.
WHITE SILK HANDKERCHIEFS LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS. SUSPENDERS.
GLOVES. CRAVATS.
WALKING STICKS. UMBRELLAS. MUFFLERS. DRESS PROTECTORS. EVENING DRESS JEWELRY..
\v ji rf
CRAVAT PIN. LINK BUTTONS. SMOKING JACKET.
BATH ROBES.
TRAVELING RUGS.
FOR ONE'S SERVANTS GLOVES.
CRAVATS.
COLLARS.
SHIRTS.
HALF-HOSE.
-SUSPENDERS.
HANDKERCHIEFS,
WOOLEN MUFFLERS.
UMBRELLAS.
KNITTED WAISTCOATS.
.. CARDIGANS.
You will find in dur stock these and a great many other things suitable for holiday gifts. We will make a specialty of putting up in most presentable form anything you may buy here. You get what you call for at
FOULKES BROS.
Hatters and Men's Furnsliers
^LIKE THIRTY CENTS"
How This Current and Expressive Phrase Originated—A Good 2 Story Told.
The origin of slang has always been a puzzle to philologists, but once in a while a current phrase can be traced to its source. The colloquialism, "to feel Iilce thirty cents," is apparently nonsensical, but it is certainly the most forceful expression of the day for denoting small, mean and contemptible in one's own sight. Its origin is thus explained by a Philadelphia lawyer. "There is a vagrant law in New York, under which a person having
110
visible
moans of support may be placed in durante. It has also been decided in that state that n, person having so small a sum as 30 cents in his possession has •visible means of support.' Now, there is no law in New. York, except the vagrant law, under which poolsellers and gamblers of that sort may be held. Shortly after the decision just mentioned was formulated, two gamblers were captured in a raid and taken to the Tenderloin station house. They s.ent for a layyer, who came and had a talk with tliem. •It will ij£ver dp to make any show of money here,' he said. 'Give ine your rolls.' They handed their wads over to Ijjm, and he gave each of them a quarter and a nickel, with instructions to produce the coins when he asked them to do so in court. "When their eases were called, the lawyer got them off on the plea that they were not vagrants, e'ach having the legal amount of funds in his .possession. Just as the decision was rendered in favor of his clients, a. messenger entered? the courtroom and required the lawyer's presence at the Supreme court. ,He 16ft without seeing his clients, and they wended Jheir way to tjie nearest saloon. "'How do you feel?' said one. 'I feel like thirty cents," said the other 'and probably will until I get my roil back? or what's lieft of it.' "And that's how that phrase was started on its travels."
An Aged Voter. ,:
The oldest voter 111 Texas at the last election was Antonio Lopez, aged 106: He has lived in the county, wliere he cast his ballot for eighty yesars.^.
BHSJUl'S B^TMS^T o»M»jtore», nicer», iteh, riugirufni. tetter, crysipflla*. head, pimplei, blotchea,nU jkliidleeoJ«. A*l!tr.««cal44, burns.
At
drugglali S0A *Jo!instou. lloljptfify *. Co., Eliilada.
THE DAILY TBIBWE TEBR6 HAUTfc IND,i WUffflAft DECEMBER 6, 1002.
EARLY.
3
CLINTON NEWS.
X.
\t
E
ALWAYS THOflOUGHLY SATISFIED.
Ladies' purses in new sliap°s— black, tanv. grey and gr en—plain or silver trimmed at -^C, 35G, 50C up to $1.50.
Ladies' handkerchiefs in embroidered Swiss and linen, all new and extra values, faiicy box with each 50c purchase, at 10c, 15c, 26c, 35c and 5uc ..
An entire ew stock of beat quality guaranteed perfumes put up in fancy packages at 10c, 15c, •19c, 25c 39c and 50c.
WaVs mufflers in all plain colors and stripes, made from best wool and mercerize^. materials, at ^Uo, 69c and 75c.
Tam O'Bhanters made with elastic roll—stripes, plain colors and plaids at 50c.
Toques, all colors, wool or silk at 25c to 75c. All new'colors and shapes in I men's ties, bows strings, four-in-hands ai.d Tecks, 25c and 50c. |j Men's heavy ecru ribbed union I suits, button down front, extra I large buttoned lap, .all si^es, li.OO and $1.35.
'V,
is visiting
Joe- Burns of Chicago friends and relatives here. 111*. Palmateer made a business trip to Terre Haute yesterday.
Clinton now lias two. full-fledged 'squires in the persons o! Kuby and Wells.
Several Clintonites attended the sliow, "The Wizard of Oz/' ftt the Terre Haute Grand. .:
Mrs. Fred Cox and daughter of Indianapolis are visiting friends and relatives here.
J. M. Butchei1 and the Rev A C. Butcher made a business tnp to iris,. 111., yesterday.
Tl^e next lecture in the High school course will be delivered at the 1 lesbyterian church December 11.
The little child of Mr. and Mrs. Archer is reported to be quite ill, also the child of Mr. and Mrs. aDvis.
M. C. Russel of this city was one''o'f the sharers of the distribution made by the Cincinnati Enquirer. He won, $20.
Several Rebeccas of Clinton attended the Rebecca meeting of St. Bernice Tuesday night. A nice time, was had and seven applicants were taken in. ,Tlie No. 4 mine of this city has been abandoned.- Work has begun upon taking up the track and getting the material so that it can be shipped elsewhere. "Faust" will be played at the Clinton Opera house Monday night. This play is well known and there is no doubt but what its reception will be a rousing one.
William Green and Nora Cook were united in the holy bonds of Avcdlock at the home of Mrs. Hanson on Water street Wedi cs 1 ev
111
ig. Squire
Ruby tied the knot The talk of a curfew for Clinton is yet making tue round's, and it may- be before many days that the youngsters will have to be at their hpunes. a certain specified hour.
The Christian, Women's Mission will entertain at th^ Christian church Sunday evening. A fine program has been prepared and ail interesting time will be had. The public is cordially invited to attend.
The teacher-parents' meeting at the school house last night was a grand success. The purpose of such meetings is to bryjg the parents -and teachers into closer ^relation "with each pother. A splendi,d program was prepared and renjlpgy'^milar meetings Will Be held in "the futune. iK
Vermillion county has anew champinn corn shucker in the person of Eiret
... ..r,...
Chapman. One day this week he husked and cribbed 140 bushels of corn. Some time* ago Dan Harrison husked and cribbed 130 bushels, but now Chapman has him to the good by ten bushels.
INTERSTATE MIGRATION
Residents Who Abandon the State
Where They Are Born.
At least one person in every five na-tive-born Americans is living in a state other than in which he was born—a striking instance of the mobility of the people of the United States. The native population of the United States, according to the last census, was 65,843, JC2, of whom more than one-fifth or 21.3 per cent, were living in adopted states.
It is interesting to note the number of. sons and daughters which the different states have sent out. New York has sent out more than 1,300,000, Pennsylvania nearly 1,000,000, Ohio more than 1,100,000, Illinois over 1,(500,000 and Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee and Virginia over 500,000 each. Proportionately to her population Vermont has given to her sister states more thart any other member of the Union. Vermonters equaling in numbers nearly one-half of the present native population of the state are living in other states. Virginia, New Hampshire, Nevada, Maine and Delaware have each seat out numbers equaling about one-third of their present native population.
Numerically, Illinois has received more citizens from other states than any other member of the Union—nearly a million 8a5,000 have entered Missouri, 838,000 Texas and over half a TiiilUop New York and Ohio! The states that show a net gain from this interaiigration are Massachusetts Rhode Island and v. Connecti-. cut of the New England? staHtes Mfew Jersey, West Virginia and Florida'of the Atlantic soast states. The other* New England states and New York, Pennsylvania and all the southern states a$ /alas.. Mississippi have suffered.'net losses. For instn.ee, New York, j^is had.,»]t jpet loss of 606.000, Ohio 012,$0 anc}, 455,422. Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and Misspuri, the great states of the middle west, have each experienced .considerate net losses, while Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa, Arkansas, Louisiana and all the states west .to tl)e P^i/ic coast have mad? gains. the most of all—620,000. .Xans^s. cQm^ next with'a gain of 422#W m^pafifbr-' nia-third with 364,000.
COUGHS, COLDS AND C0N5T|£A. TION. Few people,idealize when, taking cough, itnedicines other than Foley's Honey Tar, that they contain opiates which are constipating beskles being unsafe, pa,rticularly for children. .Foley's ^Hoaey and Tar contains no opiates, is sftfe and sure and \Vlll not constipate. .F^E sa^e by all druggists,
AN0-1F YOU KEEP TOTHE ABSOLUTIONS YOtFVE• MADE"'F0&MANY:k:frNfWSTMAS*'PAST* YONJ'kl. W YOUR §Mb^NGn
THERE IS N0 PRICE ADVANTAGE TO BE GAINED BY IfLAYr WHILE W PVRCHAS4N5 EARLY^FW^ PLENTY OF TIME IN WHICH TO MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS, ALSO THE ADVANTAGE OF CHOOSING FROiMr ANc UWSHOKEM S TO
THE RESULT OF WAITING UNTIL THE LAST DAY.WH^sTHERE IS A CRUSH AND A JAM,
THROUGHOUT- OUR -STOCK ARE HUNDREDS OF USEFul TIflfeGS'T^ATr I^AKE^CCEf^TABLE GIFTS TOR'ME^WGilEN AND CHILDREN.
•v Just received, Several piece's'of1fine cream Mohair lijistrgfp fc^nW^^ts and suits, 45 inch wide, extraity, a Jd 65c and 75cM^
66-inch all wgol (buntiiig1 in ro^aK(blue and black a yd 59c.'
1
-,
S .'*/:•
50-inch fine all wool Panama— blac, mode, green and garnet, regular SI. 25 value, a
yd
If §nsT
t"\-
Kiico:
?1.00.
Black velveteen for .waists,: jacit-, ets and suits, beat value at prices in city, a yd 50c, 75c, 8^c and $1.00.
5^. inch heavy all wool black cheviot, a yd $.1.00,
56-incli extra heavy aU.^OQjMaqS'.'" pebbl-e cheviot, regular f2.00 value, a yd |.1.50. ..
Everything you will need in modern dress linings at lowest prices.
Wabash Avenue.
OCwJOOOOGOOOOOOCOOOOQOOOOOO
OPERA HQdSE NEWS.
oocOGobeoooooooQeooeoooGoo
The Week's Bill.
Saturday—Klaw and Erlaager's Troubadours in "The Liberty Bells."
Klaw & Erlanger's production of Harry B. Smith's new musical comedy, "The Liberty Belles,," which will be presented at the Grand' tonight, tells' a humorous story in llire^e, jac^.t. .The .^cene of the first act represents a dormitory in a young ladies' seminary. In this part of the entertainment the author incites a great deal of merriment by a very adroit contract of feminine character in its formative period. He represents about thirty young girls from sixteen to twenty years of ®se finishing their education at a seminary and displays them in a number of very humorous incidents, which very strongly and comically contracts their temperaments and dispositions. Out of this feature of the performance Mr. Smith has developed one of the strongest and most entertaining interests of the entire piece. The scene presents thirty very handsome young women. Their coming to this city will undoubtedly present as great a combination- of bright and prettey faces as has been seen on the stage in this city. Among them are all kinds of pretty girls. There are large'girls and small girls girls with auburn hair like tite sun loves to kiss, girls with tresses like the raven's wings, and girls with, locks that arewell, plain red girls that can sing, dance arid have just the jolliest time imaginable in their merry make-believe surroundings With this sort to interpret it and a genial vein of ..humor vying with catchy music to brighten it, '.'The Liberty Belles" has xnade-onp-.of fehe-idistinfct hits going in musical comedy tn manjn years. The three title roles.are played, by .Violet Dale, Katie Rooney and Harry Gil/oil.
For next week Manager Barhydt of th«s Graftd has the Gface Hayward companj'- booked.. This! company are great favqrjl^ hprfe a^ t-hey-Witt no doubt play to capacity business eyery night. The opening bill will be Grausjark. The prices are popuIar5.w}B%,. b.ein§ 104 20 and 50 cents.
FFTOW THE REFORM
4- -'--i-tv "J.'ll-"1-'!' SCHOOL... J. ,G. (Grhjck^ Superintendent, Pruntytown*. »W, Va,,. j^iteau .."After trying all other advertised, cough medicines Ave nave decided ,to Epley's Ho»ey and T^jr, e,xclu?j,vd,y,. in^hef, 5Veat Virginia ^pfo,TO §clj)^(}.(ftnd it the njost effejpiiv^ fuijk. ^qI^tftlyr?1Jiarnxless." For sal&V^'aH
Opening of Lecture bourse. -^Openin^' number Epworth L^igtie £fe'6tur6 ISaturday, Peeember 6, with
DAVIS S
(America's greatest contralto) and the Roman's SympixQhy' Qjtghestra of' Chieago. *-'4-Courae .Tlf^tg^LOO. and $1.50 Can be procured at Oak Hall Drug Store, ojr ,$$. 33^ Soutb Fifth, street.
fr
"a
•jci
it ^to^i -i ^^-^31.
64-inch all linen blJeached tablej.,.^ u^amask, a yd 50e.
[Z 7 "'i* '-ol
72-ip.ch all
damask, a yd 75c. cs t.. ^w -:l
72-inch all linen bleached.table damat-k in newest designs, stripeST^ '^and floral pattens at yd $l. 00,
*=i
"-''if'''/?
24 Mch napkins to match, a doz.' $2.75 and 13.00. :0-
6 6:inch mercerized- table damask a yd 65c.
70-inch mercerized' table 'damaSk,., a yd,75c.
$2.00.
24-inch napkins, to match, a doz. "'.'J
fit if /,
2 2.1 yds j%ttei*n clotM with' 1 doz-napkins to match, a set 14.50,' $5.00 and'fS.SO.
2 3 pa it 1 doz napkins to match, a set $5.50 and $10.00
uX
NOTICE
•T-V.F?
We give No Grsei Tracie»
ing Stamps after Saturday^
December 13* 1902. f^J§
v:'":
•m,, 'f
Cil-BAKE^
Fourteenth and Poplafi
FOB quick.
O RESULTS ..
.-jt
:^at.
TRY THE TRIBUNE^ C""'
O ONE CENT A WORQ O
ine
COWUMN. (1 Z'% i/V'.?,-•"{{£
MILeACC TICKETS. jr-p-rrr
From °§eyeri to .,^e|i.. JVy|lion Klonth by Pat^one of New
i:J)
York Ctntrfli. -f
Mileage Tickets arie used vefy gen$f® ally by persons who travel at alt regulai^ ly in'the state of New York. Thfi-.}ib®&: al conlliti6l&60itind^"li,'wHIJh^th'e%e ficke?5' liave"'''b0&H' 5sfrtiyd fenfio9t?"eve^ family to" purchasfe" a mireiSg6r ticket-, Sft that Very^i/ften-'af-^rldh
a
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rwili
makey»r
tripro» sSgKt in house ^tJie^ t»ean§ '*Of ''travel flig wijth®^: a.t .fclw:t««e' 'otft
riiion^y.
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Ifr wlestimatett are usedn^*^ New York CetttrJlf
rntiTft^e''book9*a
froiU'- s«v»h: tnrflltoit Smiles njpntli. Notwithstanding that the cnirtl» have decided that the
:ast"f )f
ture-.pfi.New York
the legialji-
roW%il%
witroa^te^^.
issttennalmge itiiikrjtfsrfi'S anduittitution^ifer' th8iN4w«r¥«r* Cteritwfll^stHKwJntihues sell tJtomhi^ws/tha^aajde'lfeeral con^ tions'fasfibafoiQV? ajftgi-lifeq^ ttefe is one^ the reason^ .^faas frbfe ^stead^increase the iffiiissengeis S-thtflBK 6f".th^'N'ew Ypi*Jc
f°r
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attdMliieratr arjrfci^snwiFta under the Dowtarftt«» tabrber/oixmredi They..4^ like?^i*d:^«pei8B«fe- wanrfc'-tcr'•avoid muclt'as fch^ cott.i' jTliB &treai:, istr^igllfa fp«*»
BMrmiBiloage tifiiip
suite bocly^.'tditt C^ipdl^hsw omo-Frd^^ Bu ffal ^Com mctcial.
