Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 27, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 January 1912 — Page 4

classified coim FOB SALE. For Sale—A pair of desirable lots, first corner south from the Catholic church. J. W. Horton. For SnJßfePiano for sale cheap if taken at once. Inquire at residence of Ed Hall,»brick house north of Church of God. Mr§. Allen Gray. For Sale— Pure bred R. C. R- I. Red cockerels, price $1; . high scoring birds |1.50; first prize winner at Rensselaer poultry show $5; anyone buying two or more cockerels will get a ticket entitling them to a setting of eggs at half price. I also have for sale a few sheep, some with lambs by their sides; also 4 head of young high grade black Percheron horses. J !•'. Me-a i?r, R. D. No. 2, Phone 526-D. For Sale—Big bargain. The Marshall property in the west part of town is now for sale. Orchard, about one acre in asparagus, big twelve-room house,' cistern, drilled and cased well seventy feet deep, can’t pump it dry, barn, henhouse and other improvements. Eleven acres, fine soil. Go look it over.? Possession given first of next March if sold soon. Am inviting offers by mail, not setting any price, leaving that for you to do. You can buy it now at a price that makes it a big speculation. Write me your best cash offer. All offers strictly confidential. Address R» W. Marshall, Seabrlght, Santa Cruz Co., California. For Sale er Rent— Half -acre of ground, house and barn in Rensselaer. Mrs. S. W. Williams, telephone 519-D., R. D. 3. For Sale— Oliver or Jewett typewriter in good condition and price reasonable. Arthur H. Hopkins. - -*■— For Sale— Pure bred Rose Comb Rhode Island Red chickens. C. H. Mills, Phone 100. For Sale— Good timothy hay, 3 miles from town. Inquire of C. H. Porter, or Phone 130. For Sale— All kinds of oak lumber, sawed to Order. Phone 521-E. Leslie Alter. For Sale— Small property south of Christian church known as Harrison property. See George A Williams. For Sale— Single Comb Rhode island Red cockerels and pullets. H. J. Dexter, Phone 526-C, R. B. No. 2. For Sale— Half interest in tile mill, tile on yards, seven acres of land, three houses, located two miles north of Rensselaer. A good paying business. Possession immediately. John E. Reed, R. F. D. No. 2. Phone 505-H. •> . For Sale—A house and lot. Inquire of E. A. Aldrich. For Sale— Good 7-room house, 3 lots, new chicken house and park, good outbulldings, fruit of al 1 kinds, good well of water, electric lights. Will give possession at once. See "Billy” Fry, the' bus driver. _• For Sale-Two standard high grade •owing machines, new.jußtffomthe 'fiuSbry. W'ill be sold at a bargain. Republican. FOB BENT. FOr Bent— l 3 acres, good house, good well of water, all kinds of fruit. Joins corporation of Rensselaer. Geo. W. Ott. WANTED. Wanted— Strictly fresh eggs, Phone for prices, Miller Egg Co., Ed Miller, Manager, near Dexter’s Cream Station, one block south Monon railroad. Phone 304. * Wanted— By a married man, work of any kind. Address Box 96, Rensselaer, Ind., or Phone 288. LOST. Lost— A red cow with white face, strayed from my residence in .Rensselaer Monday, Jan. 29th. Information to Nim Hopkins or The Republican. Lost— The following is a description of my lost dog, advertised in The Republican: A phist weighing about 25 pounds, hack hlack, and underneath biown legs brown, nose from eyes to mouth gray, two distinctive marks ' are a bare place on right paw and the hair is worn off of tail. $lO reward if returned to me. Landy Magee. Lost— Kid gloves and pair of nose glasses. Return to D. Mi Worland. FOUND. Found— String of black beads. Call here. BUTTERFAT. ■ ■ -—r —' W. H- Dexter will pay 37c for butter fat this week. ELECTRICAL REPAIRS. * .. For electrical repairs and wiring, Pr imer. Phone 15.. MONEY TO LOAN. The Union Central Life Insurance Co. has made a big appropriation of

RHEUMATISM TAKES BIG DRO

Widespread Adoption of New Core Pats Immediate Check on Present Spread of Rheumatism. * ■ The crusade against .the serione spread of rheumatism in this section has had its. effect. In nearly all the important towns of the state a concerted movement was begun ;to stamp out the disease. by the wide publication of the best known means of 'curing rheumatism. quickly and surely. As an illustration of the astonishing results secured by the new treatment, ■which has been so wi.dely recommended, out of one thousand cases noted, every single case has already been cured. These results have-been carefully verifed. t was certain that some treatment had to be Tecommeded. Which one, was the question. Actual results had tp govern, regardJess of reputation or favoritism; 'rhe' record above mentioned; was accomplished by the .new treatment, "Fuss” Rheumatism Cure. This remedy is different from anything else ever prepared for rheumatiam. It contains no alcohol. opium, cocaine, morphine,_ chloral, chloroform. or other poisonous"'drugs contained in the great majority of patent medicines. We earnestly recommend all our readers who may suffer from rheumatism, gout, lumbago, or kidney trouble not to fail to try this new remedy. For sale by B. F. Fendig, in Rensselaer, and all leading druggists or sent prepaid on receipt of SI.OO or six bottles for $5.00. Fuss Remedy Co., Flint, Mich.

Over Ardent Game Wardens Arrest But Did Not Convict Boy.

Starke County Republican. Steve Urbanski, an eighteen year old South Bend boy was arrested and taken from the evening train on the 3-1, Thursday evening by a couple of game wardens. Urbdnski and a young companion had been down near Tefft hunting and were returning home with a bunch of rabbits. The wardeps approached them -and demanded to be shown their hunting licenses. Both boys had licenses, but the Urbanski boy’s had expired the first of the month. The wardens siezed upon this as a pretext to arrest the fellow and they' took him off the evening train and lodged him in-jail. Urbanski had no money to hire a lawyer, and hearing Of his predicament Attorney W. J. Reed voluntarily appeared for him. It took the jury ten minutes to set the boy free in Justice Rogers’ court, Friday.

WEAK, WEARY WOMEN

Learn the Cause of Dally Woes and End Them. When the back aches and throbs When housework is torture When night brings .no rest nor sleep When urinary disorders set in Women’s lot is a weary one. There is no w’ay to escape these woes. x Doan’s Kidney Pills should be used. Have cured women here in Rensselaer. ; This is one Rensselaer woman’s testimony. Mrs. Laikin Potts, Clark & Washington Sts., Rensselaer, Ind., says: “I was weak and nervous and had but little strength or ambition. I rested poorly and was subject to severe headaches and pains across my loins. 1 could hardly attend to my housework at times and I always felt tired and worn out, Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured from Fendig’s Drug Store, gave me relief at once and before I had used them long all my aches and pains had disappeared. I am grateful to Doan’s Kidney Pills for what they have done for me.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan's—and take no other.

LOCAL MARKETS.

Wheat—9o. ; <s> Corn —57. Oats—46. Chickens —10. Turkeys—l 3. Ducks—ll. Roosters —5. Geese—7. Rabbits —4. Veals —7-10. Eggs—29-31.

money to be loaned on good farms in Jasper county and offers a liberal contract without commission. Josn A. Dunlap. Agent

AUTOMOBILES. A visit to the auto show will convince you that the Maxwells are as stylish as any. Inquiry ..about home here will show you that they are more, reliable than others. See our show car at our garage. Remember, buy the car that has a local. . service station. > A Classified Adv. will sell it

RICH DIGGING ON SITE OF OLD MININO CAMP

Installation of New Pump Makes Possible Present Operations. SPOKANE, Wash. (Spl.)—Placer miners working at the old Florence camp, in northern Idaho, are daily taking gold coins of $2.5C and $5 denominations, minted in 1832, American and French silver pieces and lead bullets, such as were used in the days wheq the muzzle-loading horse pistol was the popular side arm, from the clean-up of the sluice boxes on the Hainkson-Champlain ground. W. A. Patterson, a mining engineer, and F. P. Lint, owner of a group of claims on Marshall lake, who has jus l returned from the camp, reports thai most of the ground is returning as high as $lO in gold dust to the cubiyard. Virgin gold was the pritcipa' medium of exchange in the day whet Florence had the reputation of being the richest and toughest mining, cam? in the Northwest, and it is thought that the rich fiqds are the result of the dust falling from the scales and sifting through the cracks in the floors of the saloons, gambling houses and dance halls in the early ’6os. While Patterson and Lint were in camp the miners were working or ground formerlv occupied- bv a gambling house and dance hall, which figured in some of the most tragic events in the history of northern Idaho, before the advent of a railroad in the western country. Gun fights were of daily occurrences and few nights passed without one or more being slashed in bowie knife duels. Veteran prospectors and placer mint ers now living at Lewiston and othei parts of that district, who flocked tc Florence when the first gold was found, declared years ago that the richest diggings were Where the cam; town was located; but, as no watei was available until a steam pump wa< installed recently for conveying watei to the sluices no attempt was made to mine the ground.

Books tor the Educated

There are a number of books which form the foundations of literature and with which everybody must have some acquaintance before he can con sider intelligently the written or spoken words oi the people of later ages Chief among these books are probably the Bible. “Pilgrim’s Progress, “Arabian Nights,’” “Robinson Crusoe, “Gulliver’s Travels,” “Aesop’s Fables, Homer’s "Iliad” and Virgil’s “Aeneid, Plato’s “Republic,” the principal play of Shakespeare, Milton’s “Paradise Lost” and “Rubaiyat of Omar Khay yam.” He should hkve a further ac quaintance with some of the - later au thors. Some of the essays of Addison Bacon, Lamb, Macaulay and Emerson would be valuable. From the poets he should have read such selections as “Elegy in a Country Churchyard,’ from 1 Gray: "Deserted Village,” from Goldsmith; “Rime of the Ancient Mar iner,” from Goleridge: “Lady of tht LAke,” by ScOtt; "Chllde Harold, ”“by" Byron; “Endymion,” by Keats; "For a that and a’ that,”-from Burns; “The Princess,” by Tennyson; "Evangeline, by Longfellow,” and something from Whittier, Lowell, Browning, Poe Whitman, Kipling, Eugene Field ano Whitcomb Riley. Some of the ficiioii which he should have read is “Vanity Fair,” by Thackeray; “David Copperfield/’ by Dickens; “Last Days oi Pompeii,” by Bulwer-Lytton; “Silar Marner,” by George Eliot; “The Vfcai of Wakefield,” by Goldsmith; “Let Miserables,” by Hugo; “Count oi Monte Cristo,” by Dumas; “Sketch Book,” by Irving; “Scarlet Letter,” bj Ffawfhorhe“War and Peace,” iy Tolstoy; “Quo Vadis,” by Sienkiewicz; “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” by Stowe and something from Cooper, Poe, Holmes, Stevenson, Mark Twain, James, Howells. Hardy, Meredith Kipling, Barrie, Ibsen and Shaw. He should, of course, have a fair acquaintance with general with the sciences and with economic writings., One may be highly Intelligent and have read but little, but he could not be considered educated. The list of books known as the Harvard classics as compiled by Dr. Eliot, which was said to contain sufficient information to give a person a liberr. education, that has been announced but which, according to the statemer of Dr. Eliot, does not include th entire number, is “Autobiography c Benjamin Franklin,” “Journal of Joh Woolman,” “Fruits of Solitude,” b. William Penn; Bacon’s “Essays” am. “New Atlantis;” Milton’s “Areopagitica,” and “Tractate on Education: ” Sir Thomas Browne’s “Religio Medicl;” Platons “Apology,” “Crito;” “Golden Sayings” of Epictetus; “Meditations of Marcus Aurelius;’* Emerson’s “Essays;” Beaumont and Fletcher’s “The Maid’s Trapedy;” Webster’s “Dutchess of Maifi;’’ Middleton’s "The Changeling;” Dryden’s “All for Love;” Shelley’s "Cehpi;" Browning’s “Blot on the Scutcheon;’’ Tennyson’s “Becket;” Goethe’s "Faust;” Marlowe’s “Dr. Faustus;” Adam Smith’s “Wealth of Nation’s;” “Letters of Cicero and Pliny;” John Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s Progress;" “Burns's "Tam O'Shanter;” Walton’s “Compleat Angler” and “Lives of Donne and Herbert; 7 ’ “Autobiography of St. Augustine;” Plutarch’s "Lives;” Dryden’s “Aeneid;” Chaucer> "Canterbury Tales;” "Imitation of Christ,” by Thomas A. Kempls; Dante’s "Divine Comedy;” Darwin’s "Origin of Species” and "Arabian Nights.”

OH, GRACIOUS!

She —And don't you go in for sport of ahy kind? He—Oh, yaas, don’t yer know. I’m —haw — passionately fond Of dominoes. ' . ,

Woman Much Mallgned.

WHEN A WOMAN has a guest she Teels greatlylfiSentod to tne friend who will ask the guest how long .she intends to stay. In this Way the hostess gains information that assists her in preparing her entertainment timetable, which could not be otherwise obtained without embarrassment. A caller asked this of Aunt Cordelia Updike, who is visiting at the home of Lysander John Applet-n and Mrs. Appleton was thus furnished the information she wanted, and by hanging arpund when Aunt Cordelia unpacked her trunk she was further enlightened. - When Daysey Mayine goes out of town to visit she always puts a party gown in .her trunk, even though her errand may be to attend a funeral. ‘‘There is no telling what may happen, and joy so often follows grief,” she will say, putting her party dress at the bottom; "I will at least be prepared.” Aunt Cordelia had no party clothes in her trunk, chiefly note books, and Mrs. Appleton gathered from this what kind of a time her guest expected, “I would suggest to you,” said Mrs. Appleton, ‘‘that instead of preparing papers on sights of historic interest, to read before your literary clhb, you take down no tbs of what you hear me say, and elaborate them into articles for the women’s magazines. “Woman has beeq maligned in the press so often you could stir up the sisterhood all over the world by coming to her defense. For instance, whe in the world is as economical as woman, and who gets so little credit? “AU my life I have been the soul of economy and never got credit. There was never a night I didn’t save the little dab of potatoes left from dinner, and I will wager there isn’t a housewife in this broad land who hasn’t a' dab of cold potatoes in her ice box at this minute. True, we always save this dab of cold potatoes .oyer night and throw it out next morning, but don’t we save it? And do the men give us credit? No! “And women are so misunderstood. If wotoan; in- dire poverty , ~ir~ given a cow and trades it for a cabinet organ, every man abuses her, but I contend she is right. There la no uplift In the presence of a cow and there Is In a cabinet organ and she has the future of her children to consider. If any of her children are destined to become great organists, would that talent develop In keeping a cow? "Not enough is written, in the magazines warning wives about this double life the men lead. At one time Lysander John kept a dollar for himself out of his week’s wages, and after deliberate reflection and long conferences with other wjrfves I reduced It to twenty-five cents Why? Because as long as he had a dollar a week to spend, I couldn’t be sure he wasn’t leading a double life Men are weak, and it is the wife’s duty to guard her husband against. temptation. “Just keep your note book handy,” concluded Mrs. Appleton to her guest. “I can furnish you with things to write more interesting than these tablets marking where Washingtor. stood, slept, or used his fountair pen.”

Jiu-Jitsu Useless.

A cricket club formed a gymnasium for the use of its members durin; the winter months, and an instructor was engaged to teach jiu-jitsu. Recently one of the cricketers turned up with a bandaged head and said some youth had inflicted the injury. “WhaJ!” exclaimed the jiu-jitsu instructor. “You mean to say you let a youth knock you about like that? Why didn’t you try jiu-jitsu?” “I couldn’t.” r "Nonsensg! „ There's no conceivabh rtttt&tloß to which elMindt > successfully applied. Show me where he gripped you.”2_ “I’m sorry to say he didn’t grip me anywhere. He dropped a brick on my head from a third floor window.”

Spoke Too Quickly.

“Sir I wish to marry year daughter Susan.” / "You do, eh? Are you in a pcsitior to support a family?” “Oh, yes sir.” “Better be sure of it. There arc ten of us.” ' ■

To The Point.

“I love you.” • ‘ ■ ‘T’ve heard that before.” ' i.' “I worship yop madly.” ' j “Idle talk." "I cannot live without you!” "Get something new.” “Will you marry me?” "Well, now, there’s something in that”

The Last Rule.

This took place during a stag party at a well-known club. . “Well; George,” one of the members said to a waiter when the party broke up, “I guess we’ve violated every rule of the club tonight, haven't we?” “Yes, sub,” George responded, "all ■rat one sub.” “What one is that?” the clubman tsked. ' “They ain’t nobody busted the rule igalnst tips, sub,” said the sorrowful Jeorge.

Custom House Humor.

Two Germans who were crossing Jie Luxembourg frontier declared to the easterns "We have with, is three. bottles of red wine each. Hove much is there to pay?” . “Where is it?” was asked. inside us.” The official gravely looked at his tariff book and read; "Wine in casks, 20 shillings; in bottles, 48 shillings; in donkeys’ hides, free. Gentlemen,” he added, looking up, “you can go.”

Unbrokan.

"We have! the same dinner set we had when we were married.” < "Well, that's' one advantage of not being abje to keep a servant” When cooking mackerel .or other salt fish, see that the skin side Is placed uppermost

The Kind of Woman Men Admire

Of course, viewed from a standpoint of pure art, “a daughter of the gods, divinely tall and most divinely fair,’’ has the call over her abbreviated sister. The Gibson girl, the Fisher girl, the Christy girl, all of tfee various girls-with whom we are familiar on the backs of magazines and in the Sunday supplements, would undoubtedly be about 7 feet high if they were Translated into real life. Also, they all havg a lean and hungry look which goes all right in a picture, but it is doubtful if any man would care for it in a lady love. In this connection it is interesting to remark that, in a previous age, when there was more marrying going on than, there-is now, and a lot more love making doing, the popular ideal of feminine pulchritude was not the telephone post woman of today, but the small cuddleeome woman that was just a good armful. The immortal Shakespeare set the ’ proper height of woman as just as high as a man’s heart. Dickens made his Bella Wilfer, his Ruth Pinch, his Dora, his D6t, all of his most adorable women, not only short, but plump. All of Scott’s heart smashers were little women. The big woman M *1 W the little woman that men loved. Thackeray’s favorite heroines, even to Becky Sharp, were all small. These great writers knew the hearts of men and they bullded on the fact that while men reverence and worship at the shrine of the tall, majestic woman, ninety-nine times out of a hundred. It Is the cute, little, cunning woman, with kittenish ways, that can wrap them around her finger. Of course there are many explanations of this phenomenon. The most obvious is that It flatters a man’s vanlty for a women to look up to him physically as well as mentally. A man likes to feel that he is superior to his wife and It takes one with as much courage to"' marry a woman" larger than he is as it does for one to marry a woman that is more intelligent and better educated than he Is. A superior height, like a superior mind, is really, a handicap rather than an advantage to a girl so far as getting married Is concerted. If you will look about you you will see that the girls who have the most beaux, and the women who hold the matrimonial, records are nearly always small women with a very limited sup. ply of brains. Of course tall women are admired and do get married, mostly to very small men, but that is nature’s effort to hold the balance steady and keep up the average height of the species, and by the same token and for the same reason the bigger man Is the Sore the little woman appeals to m. It is, however, absurd to claim that men, as a whole, especially admire either the short or the long type of woman, or that her height, unless sbe Is a dwarf, has anything to do with a girl’s chances of getting married. Oupid doesn’t go about with a yard stick and whether a man falls In love with a young woman or not depends upon something much lees tangible than her size. _ _ Probably every man has a theory, before he meets her, that the divinity who will stir <jis pulses will look as if she had just dropned down from the top of Mount Olympus, just ae every man imagines that he ts a worshipper of beauty, and that no woman who wasn’t a real, genuine, bonaflde Venus could ever make his heart go pit-g-pat. Yet in spite of this alleged devotlqn to beauty men continue to pick out as wives women who have no standing In the good looker class. In fact It is ■notorious that beauttes selddm make good marriages and that while men delight in burning incense before a living picture, when they want to get married they generally go off and pick out some lady in the chromo style of art to take home with them for keeps. * It must be a wonderful pleasure and solace to a woman to be tall, and slender and queenly in apearance and able to contemplate the reflection of her figure in every shop window she passes without getting heart failure; but her looks do not cut as much matrljnonial ice as she supposes. Men may be drawn to her by her beauty at first, but they soon drift away unless she has some charm more potent than mere good looks with which to hold them. Sympathy, comprehension, good nature, a willingness to amuse and be amused, all that we comprise in the cryptic phrase “winning ways”—these are a thousandfold more potent In securing the admiration of men than any height, or peachiness of complexion. And In this Is the gospel of hope for my short and sawed off correspondent. By taking thought, she cannot add one cubit to her stature, but she can cultivate a eharm of manner and personality that would back the poor goddess off the board.

Cramps A piece of old-fashioned candlewick worn around the leg in the garter place, next to the skin, will prevent, or cure, cramp in the calf of the leg or in the foot. I have proved this by personal experience; I believe this would prove effectual in preventing swimmers' cramp; those liable to cramp while in th* water would be wise to try it. Cotton-batting, wrapped round the body from the arm-pits downward, saved the life of a man. suffering agony from painters' cramp, it gave almost instant relief. BRAISED BEEF—When selecting beef for braising, choose a thick, square pleoe from :ome of the cheaper cuts, such as the shoulder or cross rfb. It should be C’TBt browned quickly in a little suet melted In a pan, laid on a bed of sliced vegetables—preferably onions *nd carrots —such seasoning added as is desired and about a pint of eb her boihng stock, water, stewed tomato or brown gravy poured round, It js thep Mosely covered and cooked lu a moderate oven, allowing forty minutes to the pound.

THE EUIS THEAIHE J. H. S. ELLIS, Manager. Saturday, Feb. 8 3d F. S. Gordon Presents The Stock Co. in the great detective play mt Raffles Cracksman BEAUTIFUL SCENIC MOUNTING PRICES . . .. 25c, 85c, 50c. SEATS ON SALE AT JESSEN’S. Guaranteed Attraction, Always Good

STOMACHS REPAIRED.

Gas, Heaviness, Sourness Vanishes in Five Minutes. Do you know that the best stomach, prescription in the world is called MI-O-NA. ‘That it is put up in small tablets which most people call MI-O-NA stomach tablets. Do you know that B. F. Fendig guarantees MI-O-NA to banish indigestion or any upset condition of the stomach, OTTHcneyback; _ — MI-O-NA is not a purgative, it is made of ingredients that clean, renovate and disinfect the stomach and bowels; it puts strength and energy into the stomach walls so that in a short time perfect digestion will be a regular thing. Fifty cents is all you have to pay for a large box at B. F. Fendig’s and druggists everywhere.

Domestic Science Club Will Meet at Library Saturday.

The next meeting of the Domestic Science Club will be held at the library auditorium Saturday afternoon, Feb. 3. A program that should .prove interesting to all home makers will be given. All ladies and girls are invited. The meeting will begin at 2:30 1 p. m.

Chicken Pie Dinner Menu.

Don’t miss the chicken pie dinner at the M. E. church Wednesday evening from 5 to 7. Price, 25 cents, feere’ is the menu: chicken pie, mashed potatoes, baked beans, pickles, coffee,, jelly, home made bread, cherry pie. Everybody invited.

Railroad Notice to Stockmen. Beginning with Sunday, Jan. 21st and Tuesday, Jan. 23d, the Monon will run a special stock train every Sunday and Tuesday, leaving wtte gt b o'clocK p. m. The train wtil~ run through to the stock yards. It is very important that this train reach South Hammond at an early hour the following morning in order that., the stock may be in the yards before the opening of the market. W. H. BEAM, Agent

Chicken Pie Dinner.

Mr. and Mrs. Ross Dean’s Sunday school classes will give a chicken pie dinner at the M. E. church dining room Wednesday evening from 5 to 7 o’clock. Price, 25c. Everybody invited.

Try the New Auto Bus— Prices Just the Same.

Try our new auto bus; prices are unchanged; any place In the city for 15 cents, round trip for a quarter, 25 cents one way to the college. Bes; of service guaranteed Leave orders at Rensselaer Garage, Phone 365; Leek’s hitch barn, phone 342; Barnes Restaurant 432, or Tone Kanne’s residence, phone 214. '

Telephone Any Number For Wasson’s Bus, Day or Night

All calls for bus service, either to the trains, down town, or from c io part of the city to another, promptly answered. Cail- any of the following phones: Makeever Hotel, Phone 107.' H. Wasson’s residence, No. 49. W. F. Frye’s residence, No. 369. The patronage of all the public Is solicited. HARRISON WASSON

Lecture Course Dates.

Feb. 5.—H. V. Adams, lecture. Feb. 26.—Langdon, Impersonator. March 22.—Beulah Buck Co., ladies quarteths. - , ■' - Have-your piano tuned by Otto Braun. Leave your order wlthany of the band boys. « : v