Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 54, Number 49, Jasper, Dubois County, 13 September 1912 — Page 2
WEEKLY COURIER BEN ED. DOANE, Publiiher. JASPER INDIANA
Poets should always apostrophize tho weather as feminine.
Every dog has his day because noTtody elso wants dog days.
Walking Is a delightful exercise when it is not compulsory. The dictagraph should be tried and convicted of perjury unless it tells the truth.
An eastern man offers to teach flying by mail, this at least being a safe way to study.
SITUATION 15 GRAVE
WAR AND STATE DEPARTMENT
OFFICIALS HELD ON CONSTANT DUTY.
MULAI YOUSSEF
CALERO NEAR MEXICO CITY
Two More Cavalry Regiments Sent to
Texas President Taft Says There
aim n Kin Intervention Without
II III - w w - Authority of Congress.
Vacation and Christmas are the two
great agencies for putting money into
active circulation.
Washington. Sent. 9. So tense is
the situation of the Mexican border
nnH n keen the interest felt in every
development there that officials of the
war and state departments are neiu
nn onnstant duty to receive reports
and to prepare for immediate action
should such, become necessary. Ambassador Calero as soon as he reaches
KILLS 6; HURTS 22
"EDDIE HASHA," TKt NATIONAL
CHAMPION MOTORCYCLIST, PLUNGES INTO CROWD.
MRS. BRAMWELL BOOTH
HE AND ALBRIGHT ARE DEAD
Four Boys, Spectators at Velodrome
Track at Newark, N. J., Are Killed When Motorcycle prashes Into Grand Stand.
Newark, N. J., Sept. 9. While sev
eral thousand persons assembled at the Velodrome track here were wild
ly cheering on Eddie Hasha, the champion motorcycle rider of the world,
and Johnny Albright of Denver, who
were competing in the principal event
of the day, Hasha suddenly lost con
trol of his machine and crashed over
the top of the saucer track into the
However, if St Louis women
wear ock whero will they carry
their chamois rags?
Mexico City will present to his gov- Muial Youssef, the younger brother grand stand, followed closely by Al-
rtn pmmPTit. the demand of the unltea f MlI,al Hafiri. who reeentlv ahdleat- hrlirht. Both were killed, as were four
I , . i M AS .Hrr eViall nA I t M mm I 1. fTTimfir 4-nrn - f V Q ATI.
States mat euecuvtj tiww" ed. was orociaimea suaan or morocco, suecicituis. i cui;-iu v
taken bv the Mexican government to tiav:na been named as his successor lookers were injured, six of whom are
cnfAcmsrrl the lives of Americans in . ufid. The Droclamatlon n a hosüital in a critical condition.
.iii I th W 3 -" J m w M - " i I A.
i 0rr,-f i man who thinks northern Mexico and to prevent ae- received without enthusiasm by Hasha and Albright Killed.
hMi nrvpr af r-VinnpR to "wear nis strucuon ot Aiuenu ; i me population anu cvcici pi6"-ufcl nuaud wci, "" uc "ö'ci bei i Proc.rlpn . . A l!. xi i... I . ... r. j i n "U
fleh Tiof nnriorwonr Dotn sides ot uie uuuuuaijr. xn are preparing to aispuie nis mronc oy Drignr. was crusneu so uauiy tuai uc
uuuw . , ..... J ' ....... I . . J
Jf X -l W A. J AkJ Wrfk w w w IIWIWW IIIW pww " - - I 11 I X - ,
An old maid in New Rochelle is re- partment to make a prompt reply to
ported to have found a burglar under this demand.
her bed. Lucky old maid. Regard öituanon
General Steever, in commanu uiuc
a T?ri-iVn rionfict Vina hfiRome an Amer can forces along uie UCi
fcviator, and will now have a chance made no report of additional disturbto -work on his own nerve. ances by Mexican rebels. For uns
reason officials of the war department
a Qn T?mnnir.n TL'rm n n hiis a BD&- are Incllneü to consiuer US
;ial car for her dogs. Thia no doubt ed dispatches stating that rebels have
suits the regular passengers. threatened to attacK Arizona.
. Douglas, and mat women anu umiuicu ATinthp-r rnvniisf Tint. in PortUKal are beinf? rushed to points of safety
has failed. The best thing a royalist while the male citizens are arming
plot in Portugal does is to fail.
Next to a game of chess probably a balloon race Is the most exciting rnntpat that can be witnessed these
dayi.
as a man of courage, but docile and died in a hospital here shortly after
The wife of the new general of the Salvation Army has had charge of the rescue work of the organization since 1884. She was born In 1860, the daughter .of Dr. Soper of Plymouth, and was married to Bramwel! Booth In 1882. They have two sons and five daughters.
without much ambition.
who were
4,000 HORSES KILLED
BY DISEASE IN KANSAS
ward. Many spectators,
hurried away by their friends, were q r VETERANS MEET
Biignuy nun. ,., . ...nri ro PA!
Tho beautiful weather had brought IN LUo MIMUCL-CO, uhl.
out a record crowd, and the grand
stand and other seats were taxed to Forty-Sixth National Encampment or
Estimated That Money Loss Will Reach a Half Million Dollarsstables Are Depleted.
A flonvpr nrpnohpr Kava that It ia
l gin to kill' a fly or break an egg. It surely Is a sin to break some
A New Orleans girl went to near-
en during a five days' sleep. This is
the first mysterious-bourne round-trip
record.
"When is a man old?" asks an ex
change. A man Is old when he loses
hi hankerinsr to do violence to the
umpire.
Pittsburg man at the age of eighty-
three marries a girl he had known, two
weeks. But such Is the impetuosity of youth.
Girl In St. Louis claims to have killed 10,06S,000 flies, and we are willing to take her word rather than count 'em.
oi invasion ana to
nrevpnt a massacre.
It Is stated at the war department
that General Steever has a sufflcent number of men at these places to drive back into Mexico any of the
rebel bands now operating within
striking distance of either Arizona
City of Douglas and no information
of the concentration of these bands
has been received. Less concern as to
the safety of Americans along the
border will be felt by the war depart
ment, however, with the arrival of the
two additional troops of cavalry ordered from Forts D. A. Russell and Riley to reinforce the border patrol.
President Silent on Army Moves.
so fnr as known here President
Taft has made no move in regard to
the suggestion of the army officers In
Texas that he request the Mexican
government to grant permission for the nursuit by American troops into
Mexico of rebel guerilla bands who cross Into the United States for the
mirnose of stealing cattle and horses
taken this
Topeka, Kan., Sept. 7. More than four thousand horses have die4 in western Kansas since the mysterious disease broke out in that section of
the state, and it is estimated that the
money loss Is around half a million dollars.
The great mortality among the
horses has created a serious situation
in that section of the state, hundreds
of farmers being left without the animals to do necessary fall work in the fields. Because of the practical certainty that new horses would catch
the disease and die, the farmers are
afraid to buy other animals. Mean
time fall crops are going unharvested
and very little plowing or planting of
spring wheat is being done.
The plague has now come as far east as Riley county, four cases being reported near Manhattan. As soon as these cases became known the army veterinarians at Fort Riley promptly established a quarantine, prohibiting
'the bringing of any horse on the mill
tary reservation, and prohibiting mov-
orn from r.amnine: alone: the roads
V W .,J leading through the reservation.
There appears to be no let up in
their capacity. The men were riding
at terrific speed, when Hasha's motorcycle was seen suddenly to swerve.
In an instant it crashed to the top
of the track and struck the grand stand, hurling Hasha to his death.
Tho heavv motorcycle rebounded.
the Old Soldiers Starts With
Big Mass Meeting.
Los Angeles, Cal., Sept. 9. Vet
erans of the Civil war, with their families and friends, are thronging
fho f-rpp.t.s and hotels of Los An-
from the stand and caught Albright, geles, for the forty-ninth annual nawho was coming from behind and rid- tion encampment of the Grand ing at high speed. The rider and Army of the Republic has begun.
both machines were huriea to one Every resource of the city in tne waj
side of the track and piled into a of entertainment and care has been heap of twisted steel, from which Al- put at the disposal of the old soldiers,
bright was taken, so badly crushed who were formally welcomed at a
that he never regained consciousness. ffreat mass meeting. The encamp-
Four Boys Crushed to Death. ment will be broken up on September Four unidentified boys, who were after an annual review and a long
seated In the Jower tier oi seats on rminri of entertainments and excur
the grand stand, were killed when sions.
Kasha's motor evele nlowed Into them. n nmmnndpr-in- f.hief Harvey M
Of the twentv-two who were Injured THmhlP Quartermaster General Col.
six are still unconscious and may die. D r. stowits and Adjt. Gen. Charles
Hasha was dead when rescuers R H Hoch have ben here several
reached him. He had been flung' days.
against the heavy frame work of the Ti1Q affiliated bodies which also
stand and his skull crushed like an hold national conventions here this etrir shell. Several other bones in his WPPir nro tho Women's Relief Corps,
body were broken, and it is supposed Ladles of the G. A. R., Daughters of
that he suffered Internal injuries votprans. National Association of
which would have caused death, even Army Nurses of the Civil War and
if he had not struck on nis neaa. the National Association of Union ttx
American Wins Over Frenchman. Prisoners of War-
Frank L. Kramer, the American cy- a i,orfi fwht is anticipated in the
Him? r.hamnion. nroved beyond doubt r. a t convention between the sup-
here that he Is the fastest bicycle p0rters of Judge Alfred D. Beers of
Another reason for the unpopularity of aviation among women is that it is impracticable to fly while wearing a Paria hat , -
The president may nave tatteu una üere tnat ne 1S tne iasieöt mcc porters or Judge Aiired u. .beers ol matter up with Ambassador Calero the plague. Forty veterinarians em- rider In the WQrld by defeating Andre Bridgeport, Conn., and Daniel T. before the latter left for Mexico City, ployed by the state and the Kansas Perchlcotf champion of France, and sickieS of New York city, the two
Beverly, Mass., Sept. 9. Although men living in the infected counties, üiq Velodrome jn a special one- in.chief. General Sickles is the last -esident Taft will not intervene in are working, and reports received milQ racQ Percllicot finished second of the union brigade commanders, but
and Grenda third. for the past few years has Deen
Vital statistics tells us that NewYork had a murder for every day in July. New York Is a great place for an undertaker.
Mexico without the fullest delibera- from them by J. H. Mercer, state live x, ofQ M,nf wnnln mean stock commissioner, showed neither
war, his friends declared that inter- cures nor abatement in the spread of
than it has been the disease.
T - - since the first American troops were
The French title holder showed a very poor health. In the
In
Women's
fine burst of speed a lap and a half Reiief Corps there are three promi-
from home, leading Kramer by five nent candidates for national honors, vnrris. . "Rut the American speed king Mrs Goraldine 13. Frisbie of Palo
The women's clubs of Chicago have declared war on the "masher." The most effective club in his case would bo the policeman's.
Army Officers Fall 250 Feet German
Flyer Plunges Over 300 Feet to Death.
and just managed to push his wheel
ahead at the tape.
olis and Mrs.
Cleveland, O.
Lois M. Knauff of
A Brooklyn man, bitten by a fish he had caught, is now afraid of hydrophobic It certainly is enough to make any man mad to have a fish blto him.
J Ut UtJ w " mr l ill l V4
rushed to the border IS months ago. 9 dditicu AVIATORS KILLED gradually cut down this advantage Alto, Mrs. Ida S. McBride of Indianap-
It can oe stated on um mBut;ai u.u-
thoritv. however, that should the pres
ident decide that Intervention is the
only course open to him, he will call
congress in special session and de
mand of It tho authority to send the
American army across the border.
Under no circumstances, he has
told his friends, would he do an unfriendly act against Mexico without
consulting congress.
STRAUS IS NAMED IN N. Y. Q mQ N ,NQURY
Progressives Nominate Convention
Chairman for the Governonhlp
of Empire State.
Stevenage, England, Sept. 7. Two
British army officers lost their lives
in flying here. Capt. Patrick Hamil
ton had taken Lieutenant Stewart as
a passenger ill his biplane. The two Syracuse, N. Y., Sept. 7. Oscar s.
officers had flown a consiueraoie time gtraus of New York, chairman or the
i i ...
when a strong wind sprang up anu rmrressivo state convention here,
Senators Clapp and Pomerene Make
Plans for tho Campaign
Fund Probe.
-LET US HAVE A HEART TO HEART TALK' Be you producer, consumer, dairyman,' farmer or manufacturer; are you giving thought to economic conditions as they are today in America? If so, what are your views on tho needs of importing $10,000,000 to $12,000,000 worth of dairy products the last fiscal year, and what do you think about our having to import $4,000,000 worth of meat animals during the same period? What got us into such, a shape? Let us. talk it over. Was It cheap production on the low-priced lands ot th west, or were wo scared by the constant hammering that the politician gave our industry, and which the city press has only too thoughtlessly been willing to publish as news, to the effect that we were being robbed by the trusts? Or was It mere indifference to some kind of live stock production on tüe farm because we were breeding: scrub stock and it did not pay? No matter what it was that has put us where ve are, we aro losing ground. Profit, labor and all the bugaboos that
enter into the subject have been, cussed and discussed, but the serious problem is before us of overcoming the need of sending $125,000,000 to $150,000,000 of our good American gold to foreigners for our food supply. Wo are as intelligent as any nation on earth and as capable as the people of any country to solve the problem of economic production. It Is one that must be seriously considered by all the people and each and every ono must give of his talents and means to solve it The price of land in the middle west has been enhanced very considerably
in the past ten years, and our state agricultural colleges have done splendid work in showing us what can bo
produced profitably on these highvalued lands, and dairy farming seems, to be the answer, but this must be en
gaged in intelligently. You must first have profitable cows on your farms, then intelligent farming, so as to se
cure maximum of production at minimum of cost. As the merchant, manu
facturer and railroad president must
seek new and modern methods to at
tain the best results in his business, and is constantly expending large
sums to equip himself for present day,
competition, why should not the farmer and dairyman seek the best ob
tainable information on subjects of
interest to him?
Each year at Chicago, we have the
National Dairy Show, which gives
actual demonstrations in problems of breeding and feeding for greatest
profit in all of the dairy breeda. These
shows give you a practical demonstration in all that is modern in machin
ery, both for tho dairy and for the farm. Experts who havo solved the marketing of and caring for the dairy
products for best results, hero give
you their findings. Why not take advantage of it? Do not get it into your head that you are too small in tho
business to get value out of this show;1
the small men and the beginners really are tbe chaps the show is for. The
creamery man, the milk dealer, the
butter maker, the ico cream man, alL
receive their benefit at this great
show that is founded for no 'other purpose than to advance tho interest of
the dairy cow.
Think this over and come and see
us October 24 to November 2 at tho
International amphitheater, Chicago,
the only building, except state fair
buildings, where tho immensity of
your industry can be fully displayed.
Will you do your part to advance tno
cause? The problem is before tne
country, "Which shall it be, Beef or
Dairy?"
Washington, Sept. 9. Further plans
for the Clapp committee's lnvestiga-
Tho Agricultural Department has just Issued a little pamphlet on the fattening of calves. However, it omits mention of the first and most important steptaking away their cigarettes.
When a Strong wina sprang up uuu progressive state convention uere, pomnnicrn fnnna nro tn ho lnlrl LAYS BARE THIRD MURDER one of tho wings ot tüe aeroplane col- wns nomlnaled unanimously aB toenÄfbe
lapsed. ine luuuumo ten hu... u party s canaiuaio iui !,' . nn(1 fMmlrmnn Plnnn Witness Accuses Watson's Victim altitude of 250 feet and - was de- were wld scenes in the convention. erf"e ana " lf -
With Slavlna First Wife Found
- w Chloroform In Bed.
atmvfvl The bodies of the officers
were found In the wreckage.
Munich. Bavaria. Sept. 7. A Ger-
nrnhnhlft riatft of J. PiemOIlt
.. . . -Ii I j.
The ticKet loiiowfa: . n.nnnn w, Knn
n I'll Ml lYlUIKUU O UPUCUIUUUU Uttö UUi For Governor, Oscar S. Straus of 1!" or1
Playing roqne hy electric light la cme of Chicago's present activities, though nobody really need ho ashamed to play it by daylight.
New York.
For Lieutenant Governor, Frederick
M. Davenport of Oneida.
tfnr Rocretarv of State. Homer D.
As duchesses and princesses are now going up In airships, aviation may Justly claim to havo been admitted into tho higher circles.
Farmer in California became weary of hoeing potatoes in the hot sun und turned highwayman. Tho glorious climate ot California.
Shreveport, La,. Sept. 9. Evidence man military airman was killed near . ootv, in Vinrn in a reconnoiterinjr llijiht. Lieu-
snowing a tniiu mjsici.uuD " - ... , rTi ti rni Inn with fhn wuntf nf nimrlfis tenant SteKer of the Bavarian army
r. Ballev at Metcalf. La., for which had ascended in his biplane to make Call of Syracuse.
ai AVnfo mwi ATi-c nnlW nrr In inll ft ronort of the position Of the OPPOS- -t?nr Comntroller. Gen. Horatio C.
l I 4lirMll iL 11 11 IUI J. KJ ft 1 I
here was unearthed when Richard ing force in the local maneuvers. The Klng of Kings,
WHpnv a tinner of Shrevenort. told weather was stormy and when his ma- For Attorney General, John Palmier!
Sheriff Flournoy that Bailey was ac- chine had reached a h sight of 300 feet of Kings.
a u. n,.cf ,vlfn nf hnvlni? pon- it suddenly buckled and crashed to For justices of tho Court of Ap
earth. Lieutenant Steger died
ir 'pn ii i 1 1 ii i-ii ill u Nuioviuiuhi v..
According to tho story told by Wll- shortly after he was picked up.
cox, just before she died, Mrs. Bailey
Andrew Carnecle and John D.
Rockefeller may be called on if de
velopments warrant. It has not been
decided to invite them, though Wll-
linm Rnnkofeller is to be called In
connection with John D, Archbold's
recent testimony.
The New Yorker who has invented a machine to tell when a man is in love has gone to unnecessary trouble. When you feel foolish, that's it.
rsneated the accusation to Wilcox's M1HHIRAN CONVICTS WHIPPED
i - - 1. T M 7 I A Al A MAI I
wife, anu turning to uiuiu, uuwaiuu
he was responsible for her condition.
On the day after the woman's death,
Wilcox said his wife found a threeounce bottle partly filled with chloro
form in Mrs. Bailey's bed.
neals, Dean Charles C. Alden of Erie;
rirfnn Georce J. KIrschwnv of New
York.
TTnr Slate Treasurer. Ernest Caw-
craft of Chautauqua.
LONE BANDIT ROBS TRAIN
Robber Forcet Pasiengers at Plstol'i
Point to Put Valuables In a Sack.
"Listen to your wife." advises a medical expert. Being a medical expert, he well knows the damage that a rolling pin or flatiron can inflict.
The doctors have finally decided that there Is no such thing as a blood
purifier. Those who remember tho K . . . . l .1 t V. ' 1 1
timnur-anu-uiuiiiaau uii a ui tuuu-
j
hood wish that the discovery had been
made sooner. J Rich old lady in Ohio hired an orchestra to play while her dog was eating. No wonder dogs go mad.
Japan's emperor was a poet, but as Jie was a good one this will not bo counted against him when his record U made up by the historian of the future.
TAFT KINSMAN HAS NEW JOB Appointed to Mailing Division of Post Office After Being Dropped For Civil Service Restrictions. Chicago, Sept. 6. The government has found a place for Harry Der ward Taft, a kinsman of President Taft, who was let out of the customs service because of civil service restrictions. Taft has been given a job In the mailing division of th post office at a salary approximating what he received as an entry clerk under John C. Ames, collector of customs, which
was $S40 a year. He worked in the
postal department for a year and a half before entering the customs serv
ice, and he has been reinstated.
Work of Retribution Will continue
Until Entire Rebellious Crew Has
Received Ample Punishment.
Jackson, Mich., Sept. G. Their teeth
enashlng with rage and their faces
filled with a hatred akin to those lost to all sense of value of life, nine of the
sixty-two rebellious convicts confined
in the bull pen at the state prison were taken out and flogged here. Others will receive their share and the work will go on till all have been punished. The bull pen, where the whipping took place, looked like a slaughter pen after an hour of the horrible work. The barrel over which the convicts were strapped was reeking with congealing blood, the whip of the guard had to be dipped In water to cleanse it and three men fainted with pain and had to be removed to the hospital, where, at a late hour, they were in a serious condition.
"111.. TT . C?nn C A 1srtJh
... .. ...miii usage uuy, rviui., crept, u.
CUNVIUIS IN UUUnl-nflAnllAL Dandit boarded Missouri Pacific train
No. 1, near here, and, at tho point of
a revolver, robbed the conductor and
news agent. He forced them to ac
company him through the chair car,
holding a sack into which tho passen-
Callfornla' Woman's Good Shot.
While walking through tho woods
near Cohasset. Mrs. W. H. Pillsbury
of Chico shot a large brown bear that
measured six feet from tip to tip.
Mr. and Mrs. Pillsbury were walk
ing from their summer homo near Cohasset to tho "Promontory," a high point from which an excellent
view of the whole valley can be had.. Mrs. Pillsbury had a 30-30 carbine.
Suddenly she saw a largo bear coming down tho hill about forty yards
away. "It's a boar, shall I shoot it?"
she shouted to her husband, mis-
burv answered in tho affirmative and
his wife asked, "Where shall I shoot
him?" "In the head." came the ans
wer. With deliberate aim the woman
fired, hitting tho animal square in
the right eye, killing him instantly.
The hide weighed seventy pounds
and the weight of the carcass was es
timated at 300 pounds. Chico Cor.
San Francisco Chronicle.
North Dakota Prisoners Punish Com
rades Who Try to Escape from Prison.
' An Austrian woman created a senptlon on an ocean liner by wearing a hoopskirt. She may be welcomed as the embodied reaction against the fcobbl.
Woman Lasso Champion. Calgary, Alberta, Sept. 7. Miss Florence La Due of Calgary won the woman's world's championship for fancy roping at the Calgary stampede, defeating Miss Lucille Mulhall of Oklahoma, formtr world'i champion.
Train Kills Entire Family.
Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 9. While
attemnting to cross the Frisco rail
road tracks at Spring Hill, Kan., 30
miles south of Kansas City, Mr. and
Mm Arthur Chapman and their
twolve-vear-old son George were
RiKmarck- N. D.. SeDt. 7. Prisoners rrorQ wprp eomn elled to nut all their
In the North Dakota penitentiary con- money and valuables. The porter In Ktituted a court-martial to act on the nfiiop rar saw the robber and nulled
rnse of G. Koolnson and Hi. u. n.rwin, T,n v,ßn mrA when the train stonned
- I X. AM Vrf fc W convicts, who recently escaped, from tbe raan escaped. Tho amount he se-
the prison and were recapturea. i ue cured is not known.
prison is operated under military
ruies, a cuui l-iuui liui ucm I , . n ..nrk.i in mmnMi nnill
to mete out justice to delinquents. LAbUK UNIUN IN UHUnun nuvv
TV V Noah, servinc a life sentence,
was the presiding judge and Bert Con- Workers' Leader at Hartford Quits
mv who was Robinson s nartner in After an Attack on the
blowing the safe in the Sawyer bank, Catholics.
frtf wh?Mi both were imnrisoned. was
the prosecuting officer. He appeared Hartford, Conn., Sept. 7. Following
against Robinson and Erwin. ine .a stormy session of tne tiartrord uenprisoners were sentenced to twenty ral Labor union, Frederick D. Barnes
days in solitary confinement has tendered his resignation as presi
dent. The trouble is the outgrowth
Walters' Strike to Spread. of an attack upon the Koman Catnonc
I ...... -W- 1- f .
TWon. Sent. 9. Two hundred church, wnicn Mr. Barnes mane in a
I i i 1 . -rtl iL 1
nnni-? and nthpr ftmn oves SDeecü at me riymouui oubicbuuuu-
are on 'strike at three hotels in this al church last Sunday evening. In
ihc, Tntm-nnHnnnl T-Tntpl this letter of resignation Air. names
Workers' union officials said they pro- declares that he has no apologies to
ger train and killed.
Ihr other l&rg hoitelriea.
The Love In Fiction and Life. A periodical devoted to tho drama
pleads for plays based on some emotion other than love. The difficulty In
producing such plays is that every
play must have a hero, and in making a hero the playwright, as well .as his audience, almost inevitably adopts
the view expressed 2,000 years ago by
a scribbler of the dead walls of Pom
peii: "He who has never loved a woman is not a gentleman."
Grouch's Vacation. 'Ts your husband enjoying his vaca
tion?"
"Not so much as I am."
ASTHMA, BR0NG HIT IS
1HD HAT l-tYtK
Before th next attack send Tor VJi",1 lmwedliolychecksaH
any trouble in Dreaimn. -ino initV sf
to tno most aencaio oibwiumu -at any aCe, and does not create i a hab t .it is Mo- u ntl etftictlToln every caso. nie lo-day anasi na
!2X0tor a larae supply. sutMcieut xor lureo uan.
789 Ulcott St. ttutTak,. Y.
Central formal Collef Danville, lud. Omrses: fViilet!. Luv-. T-ac)ers
lAtM, Kxiiiiuslof! Cataloau and Soar alr Fr
n K CO for. addles J1 JaforMutj, lAorl ÄtaaipiorsArücalars.Y.r4k.ikWia,
J big SCHOOL
