Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 39, Number 42, Jasper, Dubois County, 25 June 1897 — Page 3

FX PORT BOUNTIES.

henator Cannon Jnt'-nduooa Lubin'a Schonio to liolp Fin rnura

llr ll. m lliit Mtrri'li nr. I l'liHir II miuj Ii In I 'r. lit I'rul -1 lull I i'im Mileil unit lii.li flic I uniMT III' i II In h I llrUl Hllll IIum In 11 lu ur i..-ki-t 4 Ii Iii- l'r I ci'li-d on 1. 1 Kkiiiri IIimiii 1 1 I'M on I'm nil rrniJ iii'l I f Hi miiuhI lii'l I liric llr iiii" A 1 1 mi lull- I 'ret Tr title.

Bonelnf CuiM) of i tah. Introduced mi Ifagf l on .iiiirinlniriit tu the t rilT in 1 1 w hieb is likely to niuko trouble for the repiibliciin leuili-rN, und wliich may liirak down the whole prutrrtivr ks1MB, TkaMMAttBeal frivora tlx LuLiin gebenie of puyiiiff cxiiort luntiee n farm iniliiets. 'Ilii.s si ln'iiu- is now uejii1,' puslml viffonmish . not only by its author, David l.uliin, but iiImi by the ranker of ina'iy states and by trades unions and ministers. It makvsits titflit inside the ranks of protect ion. ami has Ii I ready opened inort farnn-rs' vyvn to the folly of the system than all of tlie arilT reform work that has been done. Senator t utinoii told some plain truths when introducing this fl&eodinent. lb- sjn.ke in part as followst: It was with jrreut nurprise, upon an examination of the incisure, that 1 found that the jrreat class of our population who have from the be'i lining BOt only supported the protective tarilT party by their otes, but lmv e supported the protec tive tariff principle by their industry fron the beginning of its operation, were in a larpc depree excluded from any of its benetits. Jt is, I nay, to apply u very patent omission from the measure as it now stands that tin mend me ut is proposed, ami it will Im Advocated lu re until a rote shall be had thereon. The bill, as it isoffereii to-day, nfTonK no protection to agricultural staples. There is remaining, 1 presume, no advocate of the proteethe tariff sy stem v ho v ill eavitmd that in this bill, M ith these import duf there is utbu-ilil any protection or benetit of ini ri-ascd prices arising ."nun import duties upon

any of those commodities of which o

export our surplus, nor are there re-

nTlniBg at the present time in the b hool of protoi tiuti very many men

v ho will contend and none who will

DtOe fliat the indirect protection afforded to the farmer by the tarilT on manufactured poods is suflicient cotnpensfttion to him for the cost entailed

upon him in carrying the protective

tariff system upon mainifact ured poods

It has become apparent to all thought

ful observer, und certainly it is known to all who have any direct connection with the npricul'.ural industry of the tinted ."-tatcs, that the farmer cannot, und the man w ho reads him well knows that the farmer will not, much longer bear this burden. There are three remedies possible. The second remedy, and one which I, as a believer in protection, would he ready to uccept rather than to hold to and vote for an inequitable bill, would be ubsolute free traile, by w hich the tanner Might bay us cheaply as he is Compelled to sell, ami that remedy this congress w ill not seek toenforce. Then remains, then, but the third the application of an export Imhi u ty which shall in a measure pi v e restitution to the farmer for the higher prices which he is compelled to pay )u protected markets. So proposition based upon the declaration of equal protection to all the industries of the United .States is complete, nor can there be successfully made a contention that it is just, unless it piles to the exporter ot agricultural staples from the I nit cd States an eipiiv alent benefit to that piveu to the manufacturer '.y the imposition of an import duly. A duty of "5 cents a bushel upon wheat is a delusion and a snaie. 'l ue I armer of the I Ofted States pets no beucht from it. 'I be Imposition of duty

upon cotton, if that were attempted, Would be of no value to the cotton producer. The imposition of a duty on rye is of no value to the farmer of the United! states. Every other protected Induetrj has a direct benefit from this tariff, because w here we do not produce in the Uattefi States suflicient for our own consumption anil a quantity c rnsidereMe in extent for export the import duty serves as a means whereby t be local prodneereea enhance the pi ice to the local consumer. The Immediate benefit to the farmer thrived from the treasury of thelniteil States would not be all. Kur this comparatively small expenditure to him he would receive for these staples more than $5.000,000 in higher prices than he now receives. It is true that this would increase the price of In -cedit nils to the consumers in the cities, but. unoer the declaration made here to-day that with higher prices the people will be mine able to buy we will have a larger consumpt ion of vv heat and w beat four and other agricultural staple in toe i tu s of the country than we have now at the low prices. -Mr. Butler Mr. Preeideat the sentor from Utah said be was in favor of about Ibt.ooo.ooo exjiort duty on wheat et ten cents a bushel. If we pay an export bounty of ten cents a bushel, that Will raise tin price of every bnshel Oi "hot, whether exported ur ennsuitieil !t home, that much, w ill it not? Mr. I annon- Certainly it w ill. Mr. Uutler- Then, for an investment f HMmWfi) which the government

"Olim pny out in the shape of an export

doubtful baveetmeal by the legislature of the !. nited States. In addition. Mr. President, It le eery poor ergv et, when you hati been nahhtag some man for years and he asks von for jietice, to say t hit you piupo-e to continue to rob him of more and nay that von do not know where you are going to pet the money with whieh to re tore that vliiili you have narighteouelj taken. It ie the eery firat duty of the eoagreee of the i'nited States to pi vide a bill which shall Hot only be honest in its present application, but which shall pay back some portion of tiiat which has been taken from the pockets of the tetter of this la nil. I have talked with the fanners in 20 state of the union since last fall, and I (irmly believe that this tariff would no longer endure t hem until the fa rmere of the I'nited State can have a chance to revise it at the polls, if you do not pive to them some portion of its benetits. The fanner is bending beneath a burden which he cannot carry longer. He lias liecii the backbone of the integrity of the I sited States, but there comes in the place of the tree and independent farmer of this country a race of tenantry to reap servibiv vvl..te he sowed nobly, men w ho receive their opinions from other instead of giving theirow n independent voice at the polls and in all their declarations; to their fellowmen. The senate of the I'nited Stales can afford tO bt absolutely just. 1 believe t be amendment should be adopted. Mr. ( handler .May I ask the senutor from Utah a epiestiou? Mr. ( an non Certainly Mr. t handler I heard the senatoj speak of robbery a little v. bile egO With reference to the farmer. Does the senator mean that the farmer has been robbed nil these years by the tariff? is that the senator's argument V Mr. Cannon Yes, sir. decidedly. Mr. ( handler When did the senatoi first think that the American tariff viv

tem was a robbery of the farmer? Mr. annoii .1 ut so oon as the senator pav c suthcient attention to the sijbjeet to understand the truth of it. 1 advocated republican turilTs a earnestly and as faiihfully in my humble way as tin senator from New ilampshire.ai.ii 1 believed cjiactly what I taupht. But 1 am not dlspo d .my longer to advoeatc a system by which one portion of the population is taxed for the benetit of another portion of the population. I think that it is unfair to cherish only one claas, and that the class which has already the most power

of self-protection. If the senator from New Hampshire will go ucross the plains of Kansas, as I have pone, and across the plains of Mcbn ska, I believe in him stithciently to think he will come hack and say that this bill is robbery of the American fanner. I have stated that I am in favor of a protective tariff system. 1 stated that in the guiltlessness of my soul, being a republican, I went out and advocated the republican idea of a protective tariff. I never was brought quite aoeloae to responsibility concerninp it before as 1 am to-day . Heretofore I l ave discussed it on the stump, adioc.it lag it in general term, but as soon as I am confronted with responsibility which obliges me to look more closely into it application to all the people 1 am simply discharging my duty when I seek to emend this measure so that it shall be honest to all.

AGRICULTURAL HINTS

YARDS AND PARKS. Dracrliillon of it i:etin tiiuleal Sum. liter Ituit fur I'oullr). Where fowls are kept in coiililielnent I;. will be found best to provide outdoor runs or yards tor then during the summer mouths, (uve them lice access to thane ;wds whenever the weather will permit. The most economical form, everything considered, for a poultry yard is one much lonp r than wide. TWO rods wide and eipht rods lonp is sufficient for SO fowls. Whenever a poultry plant of considerable si.e is to be established, it will be found most economical to arrange the yards side by side, with one end at the poultry house. The fences whieh inclose these

ABOUT KAFFIR CORN.

Kaprrlt net Falls to Bualaln Man? or Ihr t ImIiiim U it lie for If. Some enthusiasts declure that Kuflir com is destined to upersede bot h vv h. at snd Indian corn in Kniisax, but the Kansas authorities and the department of agriculture do not sustain tins claim. hatlir corn, an Egyptian millet, is a orghuiu, and as a i lop p...esses the.-. sdiautapes: They ield is larger by from 2o to 5b per cent, than Indian corn; it will grow and yield a crop - not a large one on very poor soil; it is injured much less than Indian corn by drought, nd even when wit lend by tin-hot, dry winds of the prairies, it w ill recover under moisture It forms nn excellent food forattle snd pips. All the experiments, of which

mnny have been made by seien ti tie upri.

hi

kt

yards may be made of poultry netting culturists, show that it is inferior in

or pickets, and should be at least seven feat high. In either case it is best to have a iMiard at the bottom, for sometimes it w ill be desirable to give quite young chickens the run of these yards. If the poultry y ards are constructed as

deecribed, there is sutlicient room for a row of fruit trees down the center I of the yard, and still leave ample room for horse cultivation on either side, tit her w ith one or two bonea 'These y ards are to be kept thoroughly cultivated. If thought best, grain may be sown before cultivation to furnish part of the green food for the fow ls. Of all fruit trees, probably there ' are none that are more suitable lor the poultry yard than the plum. ThedropI pinps of the fowls will manure the trees, and the fow ls as insect destroyers perforin a great office in protecting plums from the cureulio. After the i trees are once well established, a crop of plums should be secured nearly every year. These, too, vv ill reipilre no et ra cultivation. The plum trees perforin a valuable service in providing shade for the fowls. Where trees are not n'ail-' able, sunflowers may be used for this

purpose v th a considerable degree of satisfaction. However, some protection must be given the plante until they are well established, and even then many plants will be destroyed unkav the fowls have an nbundnnce of pren food all the time. Tbirnl World. WATER FOR CHICKS. Orlnklna Fountain Mnde of an Oiel Can nml a Saneer. A neat and handy device for watering young chicks may be made of an oyster can and a common saucer. Melt the top off the can, cut a triangular notch in the edge as shown at A in the engraving, about one-half inch deep

- --a .

ravening power to either wheat or corn. Nevertheless, as a surer and larger crop than corn. It promises most Important results for regions like Kansas nnd Nebraska, where scorching ednde frequently w ither the corn and destroy the e.-op. As food for man. It is nourishing, wholesome and palatable. Put the latent conclusions of the national department of agriculture are that its use will probably be somewhat like that of buckvvhrat it will form an occasional rather than a staple nrt idc of diet. In nourishing power it stands at 27, where bolted cornmeal stands at 37, wheat flour at 45 and oatmeal nt 02. Heretofore it has I n difficult to irr'nd this corn nne enough for use as human food. It is said thai this difficulty has been overcome lately. If so. there will soon be an opportunity to test its food value on an extensive scale. --Farmers Voice.

A

I'lmhliiK Miiiib ii liiiod Thine.

M"inty. the wheat farmers of the eoun-

,r would get. their protection of $C0,or $.0.000.000, would they not?

rhey would, if there

be

Mr. Caanoa-

1 ' ruth in tl t' !.l i i! i i in f veiniifiln

Mr. Batter That would be a verv l0i investment. Ml anno;, It would be a verv rood t if it were to be made in be"f enf manufacturing industry or -ntet in the I'nited State, but an v Wf In behalf of the farmer Is looked r"n 1th s,.om and 1 considered e

k v Crl

FRESir WATER KuR CHICKS. by a quarter of an inch wide, and the device is complete. To use it, fill the can with water, inTert the saucer over it, then quickly invert both ami set the device on the lloor. The water will remain in the inverted can till used. The water keeps fresh and the space around the can in the saucer is so small that the little chicks cannot get in and wet themselves or drown, as so often happens. The water keeps clean. This is a handy device Wurth a grant deal to poultry raisers. Q, W. Waters, in Journal of Agriculture.

NEW ROTATION THEORY. lis Adoption UlKlit Improve the Condition of Wmii-rn I'nriiirrt. When the farmers of the west see Iheir way clear to abandon the idea of devoting the land to corn as the principal crop and substitute clover, sheep and the sugar beet as the trinity necessary to the redemption of the producers from the depression resulting from low prices for farm products progress w ill be made towards better conditions. Clover and sheep produce good mutton while enriching the land. Sugar beets sre good for sheep and produce the best ..:' sogar at pood profit. Let every farmer who can and who has not already done so make a start in this triumvirate theory of rotation which is certain of success if properly conducted. In restoring the prosperity which is so much w ished for. There is an increasing demand for good mutton, an article w hich but few farmers know how to produce to perfection. The large profit Is onlv possible where the best is produced for market, (live the people good and desirable food products and conminers will pay liberally for l!ie same. Mutton, if properly grown, is the most nutritions and wholesome of the meat Siets. The mutton breeds of sheep are the most desirable and satisfactory of the domestic animals for the farm and pan be enred for with the least labor. The profits in sheep are also the most ssurinp for the future of any of the nther domestic animals. Devote lesi lands to the cereals and prosper. Farmers' Union.

The lafsiuans Wool Seheilnlr. The senate computations of the equivalents jiii- P nplcy bill rates on woolen gOOOa only need to be stated. They make opposing argument unnecessary in the mere reading, l or example, the rate is 05 percent, on second-class wool, US per cent, on garncttcd waste. SM xr cent, on shoddy, 171 per cent, on v.. ii, ten cloths valued at not more Lhau T.o cents per pound, H'i7 per cent on Maakete more than three yards in length and valued ut not more than 50 email per xuud, 212 per cent, on shaw Is mines at ant exceeding 4 cents per pound, 111 per cent, on knit, fabrics valued it not exceeding m cents per pound! 2j7 per cent, on hats of w i.ol v al tied at not more than Mo rents per OUnd,41t per cent, on felts of the same value. 147 per cent, on plushes valued et not ovee 40 cents per pound, and i.4 per cent. on the aggregate of woolen carpets. The people of the United State couM better afford to buy every sheep in the country and to put every shepherd on the pension list than to submit them selves to such shntneless plundering. Philadelphia Ke. ord.

AMONG THE POULTRY. Do not let ducklings bathe until well b athcred. I in not set hens in the la v Ing part of the poultry house. In order to have ponttrj tender and juicy futtei it quickly. Weight and size are important features in market fowls. To maintain health keep the drinking and feeding . 'aces clean. Better results in whitewashing will be secured if it is applied hot. Hens not kept with roosters will lay longer and sit less than others. If well fed and watend a good hen will hatch out ten good broods of chickens. Lime is needed by all fowls for the grow th of bones ami for egg-shell material. Ball all the early-hatched ducks as soon asready.aud keep the later hatched for breeders and iuyera. St. Louis lie-public.

SAVING GRASS SEED. The Cut irlth This Arflele Explain How l( Inn He I lone. It is an easy matter to save hay seed by a slatted manper bottom (a), aa

j D0X F0 SEED I

GRASS SEE I CATCHER ihown in the cut. If the seed is fanned, it may be used for spring seeding. Or if weedy, as poultry never raid undigested seed, such seeds may be profitably fed to the poultry by placing in the scratch room each week. - Faruand Home.

linn I Safjitaltata no- Themnelves. The woolen manufacturers continue to stock up with otieap raw material ia I t icipation of the coming tariff legislation, the transactions in the Hosten market last week amounting to ncarl S.OOO.bOO pounds of foreign wool .-nd over 1.2.V.i)fl pounds of dornest ic. They

expect to reap rich profits Vrhen they

Can make this wool into cloth to be sold

at the advanced ptteOf. whieh are now in sight. It is one more illustration ot the fact that the capitalists can overcome many of the evils of anv kind of tariff. It is the consumers who niue bear the burden of the eufferituf Providence Journal.

I. Illing Urns Need Kagshella. The avidity with which laying hens w ill eat crushed eggshells show s how necessary they are in the hen's econ omy Tor egg production. There is no better way to supply (he lime repaired for eggshells than this. The shells in the giv.ard also act aagrit, enabling it to digest food. The only care in feed ing is to crush the shell thoroughly, so that its likeness to the egg may -lot be seen. Where eggshells are throw n out without being crushed the fowls soon learn the habit of picking at the sheila on eggs, and from this they quickly be come egg enters, a habit which once formed is never forgotten.

Ilrnn Mlrn for Sheep. It has been well attested that bean straw is u valuable feed for sheep, and that they are fond of it. The le an. Iik clover is a leguminous plant, and maai tanners say that the straw, though coarse and harsh, has nearly as nine! nutrition aa clover hay. It uiakrn a very rich manure when fed to either sheep or cows. That is shown by ita rotting very fast when piled and giving off the strong smell of ammonia whieh comes from feeding any manure rich in nitrogenous nutrition. Dakota Field and Farm.

tiuaril Aaralnst (ii erf n-dlna. It is an easy matter for a poultry raiser to overfeed his fowls. If a Hock has the privilege of a range the farmer need give hardly any food at all if grass, seeds and insects are plentiful, yet some who are really careful of their hens feed three times a dny. under the bebef that the more food the greater the number of eggs, and endeavoring to aecure as many eggs as possible they get the bens in a condition that Incapacitates them entirely, lleav feed ing of giain is nt times an advantage, such as during extremely cold weather, but the food must be regulated not only according to the seasons, but also in accordance with the condition of thi hena. Dakota Field and Farm. Mcnnrlna- In Vinns l'laThere are several W 'uedies in case ot Monring in jremng pigs. First hold ut on the feed of tin-dam, or hange it t something else. If this does not atoplt take a lamp of alum the atatof wab in ', dissolve it in a pint of water, give ach pig a tenspoonful three times a day. Another good remedy is to parch Wheat Hour until brown, ami mix with akim milk anil feed in the some w iv. or If the pigs are old enough to eat. feed In a trough. This last ia an excellent remedy for scours in calvee or young colta Hurei World.

THE MARKE IS. Nsw foaa Jimm -v tw.

CAIii.r. Nut I vi st. -er . file W.f .S I.S

oirn n vi .i.ini, . ; rtOL'K W later tVhcul I MJ

WHEAT N. I X. illieru lllliN N.. :

OAT N . WOUU Si i . . j pj ST Iritis 00TTON MktdUai III. i. . i.s bUs i, SMI l a au I Heilen i.i OALVtsa (each) rv H no . fair u.s. ii ei i HHEKP I -.i in bo loa i uu r'LOt It I'ulcnu 4 I faaoi i . i.xiru .to. . . ä ) WllEA r Nu 1 i; ml vv later . i CilltS' No. .'M.xei! 2J'. i ) A I S S

UVE No S J TOIIA i U L'ik's SIM It ..I Uiuli-v 4M li an' inir Tiutoiar a ua &UTTHR ( In... . Dairy H kkillS Kresli

I'l lltlti Muiiiiunl lliewl BAXN rltlti b,..i PrioMntaaai lib AGO

cattei: VatlveBteera. jin lbs. fair to Choice . s IA BUK KP Kulr toC'boloe s uu KbuL'i: W inter r.u-nt su Son ue I'. i'. lit, 3 ;u

WHEAT No. S Siirinir ," .',

No. - Iteil ft CORN No.! 44 OATS No 2 KMtai Mi-, (aevri " M 8 K AN . i lTY.

CATTLE Stn.iiin St er . 3 25 4 Hu .S A II (J rude S 20 it WHEAT No. S Hard u& OATS No. 2 White 10 A COKN Nu- SU & N'EW ORLEANS'

FI.'U'K II eliiir.ele ft 15 O KN No 2 OA'i"s U'eatara ss 11 A V Choice 15 :) IMItK N Mass IIA UN Sides

COTTON Muhl 11 at)

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l.ill IS ll.l.l'. win. t c lie i m at C' iN No 2 Mixeil j:v OATH No SMUad I l'i KK New Mex 9 ai (,(, b.'i N' Clear lib 5 '4 a COTVOH MMdUag Hto

4 Ml :t us iu IU, 21 4 75 ma 1 mi c N ft., 1 HI', Wt i .ÜI 5S ri

WASHING BLANKETS. lummer ia tha best time for waehtay MenheM To do the work satiafaolorUy till a tub half full of soft hot water la which hulf a bur of Ivory soup haa beea diss . 1 v e1, und wash gently with the hands. Kosin soap ami hard rubbinf rums Uuiikcfs. "A In n clean rtuaewelL. hamj Ol the line in the sun Aa aoonaa dry, fnil evenly and put away securely in a box or closet. UlanKets washed thus will remain fresh and soft foe yeara. ELIZA R PARKER. Where r rlr iitUhl ..,... Cynthia Io you think Frank will love me ivhen I am old, Maud. Maw! Well, there one thlnf. dear. you'll MMin know. I'iek-Me-l'p. NhnLe Intu lour Mhuea Allen' I ' I ie. a powder for the feet. It euren painful, wollen, mint 11. g feet snrf instantly takes the stmK nut of corns and bunions. It's the gyeeteat o mi ort dieeoess of the nge. Allen's Koot Ease makes tight ear new ahoes feel ey. It is a certain ears far IWaatiftf, ralloun, hot, tired, ;u h.ng fsaA. Cry it to-day. Bold ly all drviggnts and I oa störe, 2- . T rial pa KRKIC Write to Allen S. Olmsted, LeUoy, N. Y.

When we aay that vv isdom is letter thaa rubica ra leaetally seeta mir wisdom and oUMt peoiile'e rubies N. Y. Weekly. Hall's Catarrh Care Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 75e. "I want sofnrt'iing nire in oil for a dhsinc room." "Xf madam. A landscape e a box uf sardines?" After six years' snfTerlnp, I was curatl sw Piso's Cure - Mary Thomson, 'JU) Okls Ave., Allegheny, Pa. , M.irLh 'U4.

The jinorer a man i, the more nffents tr to sell hia things. Washington Democrat.

THE wGB0WN-UPw DAUGHTER'S DUTY TO HEß 31 OTHER.

n u. -w 11 j vaaaaaaaaaaaaav i

You can only have one mother; therefore, when her step is prowlnf alow and her smM flOOtaJ with fortbodiiis, and you can see that her whole

nervous system 1. upset, it is your filial duty and privilege to attend to her ia tni.e : Mother is approaching the moat

J critical period of her life.

The Change of life, that is what mother is dreadine-. and no wonder, for it ia full

of peril to ail but the strongest women. There are some special and rerw wearing symptoms from which mother surfers, but she will not

speak of them to any one. 11 ip out; she doesn't know what to da

for herself!

Shall I advise you ? Firat, aemd te

the nearest drug store and get a bottle of Lydia E. l'inkham's Vegetable Compound, and see that mother takes it

regularly, then write to Mrs. IMnkham, at Lynn, Mass., giving all the symptoms aud you will receive a prompt reply telling mother what to do for her self. In the meantime the Vegetable Compound w ill make life much eaalsr-

for her. It tones up the nervous system, invigorates the body, and the ' blues" vanish before it as lurkness flees from the sunlight You can get it ut any reliable druggist's. Mrs. Lori8STRoNn,narrisIIill.F.rieCo.,N.Y.,says: "1 have been troubled with falling of the womb for years, was advised to take Lylia K. I'inkhama Vegetable Compountl. I took thirteen bottles ami received great benefit. When the time for change of life came I suffered a great deal with faintness anI palpitation of the heart. I got one bottle of the Vegetable Com

pound and one of Wood 1'urilier and was relicvcl again. I was thereby enabled to pass through that seriuua period very comfortably."

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iiiiHi

i;

1 1 1

1

Un a red hot

day Hires Rootbeer

stands be

tween you and the dis- ' tressinir ef

fects of the heat

HIRES

Rootbeer

cools the blood, tones the stomach, invigorates the bodv. fully satisfies the thirst. A delicious, spark

ling, temjeranee drink of the highest medicinal value. s4f sje tw Saartss c Hsi Da . mi. A Hli. nun iiIIhi. 1.1.1

I $22.50 1 For What? A First Class Ticket from KanX sas City and almost all A. T. Sc dl S. F. points in Kansas. Oklahoma 2 and Missouri, to California. I When?

At the time of the ChrhHaa Ea deavur Convention in July By What Route?

THE SANTA FE I

The tame rate will also aoclv to

Intermediate points, and la

T the reverse direction. 1 Open to Everybody. Send (or descriptive books and

m detailed Information to any agent 9 oi the Santa I e Route. 0 ta th

undersigned.

J. BLACK. 0. F. A., A. T. S. 7. mT.

Room US. th and Jacksoa Its.. TOPFXA. Kftlf

glejrejr!CHHf t

to S

EDUCATIONAL. CicapMusical College, CENTRAL MUSIC MALL, CHICAGO. ILL. D. F. ZIEQFELD, Pri E tOfMT. MI1QIO ORATORY and mUOIVs DRAMATIC ART. 32nd SEASON BEGINS SEPT. 6. 1897. t -: (UK (ATW.Mll SC.

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(ihm. uuiibiim liu fik.

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HJWBiri OB 1 I. V. Wl ' fl ft IllftlUI. MM

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Write nt anee far assr -

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