Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 175, Hammond, Lake County, 15 January 1912 — Page 4
THE THIE3.
Monday, J an. 15, 1912.
THE TUMES NEWSPAPERS By the Lake County Printing ! Pon. Ilsklns; Conrr,
Gary Evening: Times; Lake County Time (Country); Lake County Times (Evening); Times Sporting Extra, and Lake County Times (Weekly).
A WORD OF CAUTION.
Entered at the PostofHce. Hammond, lad., as second-class matter.
-Main Office Hammond. Ind,... Tel. 111 rrivate Exchange. Call Dept. Wanted. Gary Office Tel. X37 East Chicago Office Tel. 476-R Indiana Harbor TeL t&OR Whiting Tel. 60M Crown Point TeL
LARGER PAID VP CIRCULATION THAN AST OTHER TWO NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION'.
ANONYMOUS communications will not be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor. Times. Hamnond, Ind. '
THE DESERTED INN.
It stand all alone like a aroblln la array, The old-fasklonod Inn of m pioneer day, la a Iaad bo forlorn and forgotten it
renin
Like a vrralyi of tke past risings Into
our dreams
If glorii have vanished, and oaly the
gkest
Of a alarm-board now ereaka on Its deso
late poat, - '
Reealllaa; a time whea all hearts vrre
akla As they rested a night la that welcoai. . . Ib iaa. The win 4 wktatles shrill thru the wide. oaea door. A ad llaarda keep house on the moldrr Iaa; floors;
.The kltehea Is cold, and the bait la as
still
As the heart of the hostess, oat there b
the bill;
The a replace that roared la the lona;
winter nlarht.
When the wine circled round and the
, laughter was light. I a anasa of array stones, and the gar. ret-rats play
HJde-aad-aeek ea the stairs in the glare
of th day. K laager the boat hobbles dawn from his rest In the porch's eool shadow, to welcome hta guest With a smile of delight, and a grasp of the hand. And a glaaee of the eye that no heart could wlthstaad. Whea. the loner ralna of autumn act In jfrom the west The mirth of the landlord waa broadest aad best, Aad the stranger' who paused over the nlgkt merer knew If the clock on the mantel struck tea or struck two.
Oh, the songs they would alar, aad the
talea they would spin.
As they louaged la the light of the old
country Inn.
But a day came at last whea tbe stage
brought no load
To tke gate, aa it rolled up the long,
duaty road.
Aad lo! at the aunrise a shrill whistle
blev
O'er the kill aad the old yielded place
to the new
Aad a merciless age with Its discord
aad din
Made wreck, aa It panaed, of the pioneer'
lan.
James Newton Matthews "The Lute of
Life," Horton & Co.)
If the present mad specualtive craze in real estate in this locality
persists, some people are going to be badly hurt not physically, but
in' the pocket-book, ,
We desire to call the attention of the cities of Hammond, East
Chicago and Indiana Harbor to the following words from the statement of S. W. Vaudclain, vice-president of the Baldwin Locomotive
works, published in these columns the day the great news "broke."
"Our procedure will be conservative, and the work will progress
AS THE COUNTRY'S BUSINESS MAY "WARRANT. If the present depression in business dees continue the progress will naturally be slow.
"IF BUSINESS DOES REVIVE and we are called upon for our
maximum capacity, the progress will be most rapid."
WE TRUST THAT YOU WILL BE CONSERVATIVE.
Do you think Mr. Vaudclain was talking just to hear himself
talk?
The Baldwin Locomotive works is coming to Calumet, but WHEN
WILL THEY OPERATE?
Officials of the company practically answer that question .when
they say "as the countrys' business may warrant."
We call your attention to the significant words m Mr. Vaudclain s
statement in which' he speaks of the PRESENT . DEPRESSION IN
BUSINESS.
The location of the Baldwin Locomotive works in this district
has aerain drawn the "eves of the commercial and industrial world
toward the Calumet region. While the advantages to be derived
And If you-have ever visited Nevada n election in the Gary counclLls no
you will admit that thefe are a eood I airrerBl than the average Gary elec-
manv sauare nll that drm'r vn d. I. . ' "owe"-. in this one the opposi.
;J .t i I n can blame Sheriff Grant for the
scivn lum nutuuum yarfc ol a Human i way It went
being let alone a man.
HIGHWAYMEN after robbing a Chi
cago man took away all hie clothing of the cold pH-
NOW that the Camorra and the Garv
bribery trials are relegated to the back of the stage for a while we will be
dosed with Iorlmer stuff for the rest
JUST now a small boy has a hard time
deciding whether he would rather be a
coal dealer or a real estate man at Cal
umet. .
Now, Watch Mu outer (irow, (Munster correspondence to Thk Times.)
MR. AND MRS. BELIJENRtTST hav. a
SOME men, after hanging on the little daughter, born Friday of last
water-wagon for about two weeks in wek- Munster is growing. That makes
and left him shivering in the street.
It may become necessary to have
mpty barrels left around in convenient
places in Chicago street shortly.
WOMAN WHITER BREAKS DOWN WEEN SEE FACES MURDER EVIDENCE IN COURTROOM
January, evidently become imbued
with the idea that it is sure death to
stick and chance it by falling off.
'THERE is a form of butter in India called "ghee." We hazard the opinion that it is something like that which we try to spread on a piece of bread these
nifty mornings.
AFTER all it may be just a conspiracy between the hens and the
hens and the weather man to inflict
from the coming of this mammoth industry cannot be estimated, and another cold-storage outrage on the
significant as it is, its location only further demonstrates the conten-1 country,
tion we have so often held that this is the logical center and is destined
to be the ereat manuf acturine reeion of the countrv. A few vears
aero tV,i tMfnt wmprl Kir an irla1 Kna.tr torlav it is a wr f fd v tituAtuv xti we near some men
fat 8ay. " owe everything I am to my
But why should people with little money get epilepsy when they wlfe" we ,ecl like asWns them KAtrln nnUcn tVIr n,.rcA ctn'rifi? when they are going to pay them
In the midst of the warranted general rejoicing with hopes and bflck?
anticipations, is a WORD OF CAUTION AMISS? tl. i i- r .v? x. i i i ?a ..u: i i :n
iiic lutauuu ut una great yiaui auu ua uuimialc tumpiciiun wut i "MR. Taft's emblem is the peace I ner'
aaa wonaerruuy to xne growxn ana prosperity oi tne wmmci region, dove .. saya a New York neWBpaper Vint J rrmcr rsnf K f nrcrnt ati 1 Viat rintViino Jo cr mtirVi nVT?W-C APT- I . ..
" -"-i-,-"--- . , . I we Deneve mat De o Detter get a
1'ALU.t.U AS rKU&FlAlV. fKUSfH-KlX X. let us enjoy our I flghting cock with, a good gaff
success ana utilize the benetits tneretrom conservatively, ine aream and hopes, the plans and schemes of the over-enthusiastic promoter out-strips and out-runs the progress of real prosperity. PUT ON THE BRAKES! Great as will be the benefit incident to the establishment of this great industry this community- may realize what other communities have LEARNED TO THEIR SORROW, it is not only possible, but generally true, that the benefits are greatly over-estimated and the
foundations of success, broad and strong they may now appear, may
be insufficient to support the great superstructure or unrealized an
THOSE fresh Chicago
who thought they could "pull off that
rough stuff" in East Chicago have seen a great white light.
two births and a wedding In the new
years, and the promise of another weddingsoon, besides the prospect of a street car line In the near future." WHAT has become of Mrs. Hennery Coldbottle? She also had a lot near the new locomotive- works, sold it, and has gone to Palm Beach for the remainder of the season. OF course, a lot of good people who made New Year's resolution to go to church every Sunday let it fall and
break yesterday. No breaks in resolu
tions to faithfully attend the theatre
every Sunday night have been reported
yet.
The Cruise of the Water Wagon.
SEVENTH day "When in Hobart do
as the Hobartites do" and this is what
the water wagon crew resolved to do
with the exception of one thing or else
there would have to be a new crew.
Like all of the other real good Hobart
sports. Hennery Coldbottle and his co
workers came to Gary to spend Satur-
urday night. After leaving a few temperance tracts in the thirst parlors
along Broadway the boys continued their trip up the "gay white way" until
Garden hall was reached. Here Hen-
Hy Ball, Bud Wiser and the
proofreader met several swell wrens
and they were soon dancing with them.
The "turkey trot," the "grizzly bear."
which is as popular here as it is among
New York's 400. was on tap. and the
promoters I iol,y members of the crew soon showed
mat "tney were there." a lot more migrht be told about this dance, but it
isn't going to be told or el,3e Hennery's
wife would be buying a ticket to Reno.
A HOBART woman club is getting so
metropolitan that it comes to Gary to
THE man who was arrested in the I ho,d its meetings
east with seventy-two sticks of dyna-
OSBORN'S INTERFERENCE.
Governor Chase Osborn, of Michigan, has urged President Taft to withdraw from the presidential race and thereby stirred up a hornet's nest in
a sister Btate. As the leader of the republican party in Michigan, Osborn's request is in mightly poor taste and it
is hard to fanthom Just what grounds
the executive has for his action. Pres
ident Taft ha3 the staunchest of supporters in Michigan men who believe
that, considering the remarkable un
U-w rest prevailing in his administration,
V
mite in a suit case, was quite evident-
bitions and plans, development and inflation which they may be ly not on his wa to a Beace meeting.
called upon to bear.
i nat tne isaiawm Locomotive woncs plant win aaa lmmeasuraDiy NEW York Citv has movine nictiire
to the business of the Calumet region goes without saying, but it must in the schools. What jLake county
aius uc remcmocieu tnai ix n ilii nui iuajmi v .c-x. i it x c is. i schools will be the first to use the
UK BUSINESS MAN A MILLIONAIRE. , clnpmentoeranh'
ihis paper urges upon its mends the need ot conservatism and
the heeding of the fact that one of the great dangers which threatens
the steady, progressive real prosperity of a community is the over- EUROPE la as unhappy, take it on
Home-Made Cooks Best. Girls who go to college, Usually wear small rags. They have a little knowledge, But can't use paper bags. HAZEL. NUTT.
TIMES' headlines; "Draws His Pay
and Then Disappears." A wire from
"our special correspondent. Hennery
Coldbottle, is to the effect that he Is
not with the water wagon crew.
THOSE flags hanging on a Broadway
. . 1 1 .a : n , . i
. " . - - - . .. ..IaVi, i, , iuuiuiiiKfcieiiuiBiuiiiiiaf3. merely taxing of its resources and the ruthless, rush toward sudden wealth. tbe whie, as if it were trying to elect Homer s signais to get onto the park
Property values doubtless will be higher and the holdings of every an alderman who is to supplant one board again.
person increased, but the location of no one industry, however, mam- charged with bribery.
moth, NEVER DID NOR NEVER WILL WARRANT THE FOOL
ISH PLANS OF THE EXTREMIST.
Let us therefore earnestly suggest that our plans for the future
be justified by the real prosperity. Let us not deal too much in "fu
tures. Let our expansion, our building and our development be war
ranted by conservative conditions, and then real prosperity and not
mushroom growth will be insured
THE TIMES is ndt a "kill-ioy" but we feel that it is well to
guard against BALEFUL REACTION
ktxsu weatner nas reached such a
pass that we haven't the heart any more to mak-; fun of these fuzzy-wuzzy
ear tabs.
THAT Ross township farmer who has
a filter attachment on his pump is cer
tainly selling purer milk than his less
enterprising competitors.
paraiso are successful and more of the
city officials are put behind the prison
bars where they belong, such disgrace
ful demonstrations as were made in the last council meeting In Gary will be impossible. , Every newspaper in the middle west carried stories of the brazen attempt
WELL ,if the corset goes, as fash
ion has dictated, something worse will
undoubtedly be substituted.
The Day in HISTORY
that is beyond ordinary estimate
"He was my friend, faithful and just to me," is a tribute of the best and
I noblest sort.
Happy is the man who enjoys his
neighbor, at home and in business The stern, unbending type of employ
er, socially aloof from his men, Is Fleming's beer is
SOME men declare that it is a toss-
"THIS DATE IX HISTORY"
January 15
51 The first colonial assembly of
up wuu:u.ib me more irouDie tne 1 1753British Museum first opened
hired girl or the mother-in-law. X782 Thomaji Wlldey, founder of the
Independent Order of Odd Fellows,
born. Died Oct. 19, 1861
WE believe, howevpr. that Svll825 Robert G. Harper, twice candi
MmS
lira. Rene Morrow, the Chicago writer, on trial charged with killing her inventor husband, has lost heart for the first time since her arrest. ' Whila she watched those desert her upon whoa testimony she had based her hopes, while she saw tbe evidence piling up against her, and during the "defense tea" she gave at her home, at which her friends subscribed $1,000 to aid her In her fight against conviction, she maintained an attitude of smi.ing assurance Now ah apparently has lost her confidence. She sobs In court. The authorities are expecting a confession of her ruilt before the trial Is ended.
years old, had become obsessed by an pray the court to grant him a new
idea that some one was intent on kill- name if it would not be necessary to ing his family. Several days ago he start from the bottom and, win his proposed to his wife that she do the job, fame all over again, because his name
with an ax. safe: blowers sextexced. George Gibson and William Murray, who 'confessed to attempting to blow a
is confused with that of Carl Morris, the "white hope," who has gained some notoriety in New York. Mr. Morris says a day seldom pases that he does
safe In the Hixon brokerage house atnt communications intended for
tne man wno is picaea to wpip jars
Johnson. He has been requested by
unknown corespondents t "beat the
black man's face into a pulp," and to otherwise mutilate the negro champion.
just as good and
to illegally elect an alderman by Btuff- sometimes able to get satisfactory or better than Crawford Fairbanks'.
Ing the ballot boxes. Manufacturers even unusually good results from
who may consider locating in Gary j their work, but he misses something
will certainly not care to take the big that only the heart can measure.
chance of having to deal with such a
condition and Gary suffers accordingly. It is not a question of throttling the newspapers and then allowing this municipal rottenness to eat its way through the official circle of Gary. It is a question ot cutting out the cancerous growth at once and newspaper publicity shows the public in general
where corruption exists. Gary's pride
THE cost of dying has gone up 33 hi
per cent and a lot of us feel that we
simply cannot afford the expense.
CLEAN YOUR SIDEWALKS.
r 1 a i t t a. i
une BOOU inin8 aDOUl a Bnow Blt,rm COLONEL Bryan evidently found a
is tnat it generaiy aids the poor, forllot ot glnger to bring home wita him
manysget temporary jobs and then, be- from jamaica,
sides, it gives exercise to a lot who
wouldn't get it otherwise.
Now this is a pretty picture, but in A MAN out west is trying to regain
our Lake countv towns and cities thev U fortune by newspaper work. No
done remarkably
'""the president has
Weil. By the way, suppose some petty county officer in Michigan should ask Governor Osborn to get out of office and herald the request abroad in the public prints, just what would Osborn think?
and its splendid capacity for achieve-' don't live up to the snow ordinances wonder he lost it.
ment will eventually remedy this de- and the poor men looking for a Job
be redeemed . When demo-1 In this connection we would like to
crats are replaced it will be by dem- ask why the city administration ocrats straight down the list. When doesn't get busy and Institute k few
a republican goes, a republican will prosecutions against rich property
MORE "PURGING" NEEDED. The disgraceful proceeding in the Gary city council, which characterized the election of a new councilman to take the place of Alderman Antony
Baukus by which eight aldermen repeatedly cast ten ballots, , indicates
that there are still a'number of councilmen who wll have to be eliminated before Gary officialdom has the house-
cleaning it so badly needs.
If there was any doubt in the minds of the people of the city of Gary that the city council is infested with
grarters wno are still carrying on their crooked work, the proceedings preceding the election of Hess should
furnish the conclusive proof.
If there Is still to be found that type of citizen in Gary who thinks that
stories of grafting should be sur
pressed for the reason that their pub
lication "hurts" Gary, this incident
Bhould furnish a practical demonstra
tion of the necessity of laying the whole situation wide open and giving
the Steel City n house-cleaning that
will purify it for the next ten years
If the comins prosecutions-at Val
plorable condition.
DID HE GET HIS RIND?
"The city administration is going to walks.
jgets it not. And very few get exer
cise but a lot others get some bad
falls and; everybody, has "hard sledding" tramping over snow-covered
fill the vacant place." Gary Tribune.
Now who told you this, that you
speak so authoritatively, and where did they crave the melo'n? In a wine-
room or out in the open field? And did they give you the rind in the shape of the ciiy printing?
Moral The wisest plans of mice and
men, etc. .
owners who do not clean oft their
walks? The people would like to know.
OUR NEAR NEIGHBOR. There is perhaps no better criterion
of a man's contentment than his rela
tions with his near neighbor. Not
We have heard nothing about the foolishness of the Baldwin Locomo
tive works locating: at Indiana Harbor A" again it was no less
, a a v. r.i Bat when he couldn't stuff again
umet, because of the danger of
"quick sand," but the yelp will un
doubtedly come.
THE Hon. Mr. Boehne in his fight
against T. Taggart is simply butting
every man is so Bituated that he can;nis nead aaglnst a stone wall and If
find agreeable companions next door, you 8aw a man dolng that why y0l,
Dut mere are not many communities wouidn-t think very much of his brains, beer because the water supply gave out. ! .1 I ...
m llo ttvciase iuwn wuere uue rauuui wniilrl vnll' I THIS is certainly nen on earin
find neighbors worth while. It is a wise thing to make friendships among such people. Aside from the very evident fact that you are like-
date for Vice President of the V. S.,
died in Baltimore. Born In Vir
ginia in 1765
1881 The inaugural address of Gov
Curiln of Pennsylvania pledged the State to the national cause against
secession.
1864 Society for promoting aerial
navigation formed in Paris.
1865 Edward Everett, statesman and
orator, died in Boston. Born April
11, 1794.
1891 Indian war In the Xorthwest end
ed wjth the submission of the hos
tile Sioux
1905 Thomas H .Carter elected United
States senator from Montana.
"THIS IS MY 30TII BIRTHDAY"
Crown Princesa of Sweden.
The Duchess of Scania, who In the
ordinary course of events will one day become the Queen of Sweden, was born January 13, 1S82. She is the eldest daughter of . His Royal Highness the Governor-General of Canada and the
Duchess of Connaught Princess Mar-
Igaret Augusta Victoria Charlotte Norah
to give full baptismal name, was mar
ried in 1905 to Prince Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, who has since been created Duke of Scania. They hava three children rrince Gustavus
Adolphus. Duke of Westerbotten
Prince Sigward, Duke of Lpland, and
Princess Ingrla.
Congratulations to: W. H. P. Faunce, president of Brown
University, 64 ears old today.
Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, superintend
ent of Chicago public schools, 67 years
jold today
Charles P. A. Landry, Speaker of the
Senate of Canada. 66 years old today.
Job Harrimai, Social Democratic
ANDY CARNEGIE says Gary is a candidate for Vice President in 1300
mistake. Even so It has been a very and recently an unsuccessiui candidate
profitable mistake for Lake county
A SUFFRAGETTE In big Chicago
discovered that campaign cigars are
half rope. This shows you how much
a woman knows about politics.
IN St. Louis they had to quit making
HEARD BY RUBE
To Gary's Council.
That Cassy's work was raw and rough
You certainly will opine,
For did not he the ballots stuff How could eight votes be nine?
Bight was nine and soon was ten
We soon had Alderman Hess
HENNERY COLDBOTTLE.
for mayor of Los Angeles, 51 years old ! today.
IF the weather man can pull off a storm in the Calumet region without
ly to see them often in some cases killing or injuring some one, we shall
many times a daythere is a charm be more than pleased to give it proml-
about the fact of "being neighbors" nent position on the first page.
that can scarcely be duplicated in any other sort of kind of friendship. "I
lived neighbor to him for twenty The census gives Nevada only sevycars" has a touch of sentiment "In it en-tenths of a man to the square mile.
That Old-Faskloned Disk. When wintry storms are rife. And swollen rivers freeze. Then is when th busy wife. Makes such nice headcheese.
MINNIE FISH.
OLD subscriber, evidently a young man. writes us that since those narrow
skirts came into vogue that his arm
will slip twice around the waist line
before It becomes taut.
Up and Down in INDIANA
SUICIDES IX JAIL. Gustav Schentx, v recently adjudged
Insane by a luancy commission, was
found hanging lifeless from a hook in his cell In the County Jail at South
Bend Saturday by Turnkey Frank
Eash. The body was stilt warm and
the turnkey. Sheriff Kern and County
Physician C. S. Bosenbury worked with SchenU for some time, but rususltation
WHEN yai begin to think it, about was impossible. Schenta, who was1 36
Mlddlebury, Ind., Dec 20, were sentenced to 'Michigan City Prison for terms of from two to fourteen years. Clyde Spencer, an Elkhart insurance agent who reached through a desk railing door In Superior Court Clerk Aitken's office and yok $38 out of an unlocked till, when Bessie Diener, the deputy clerk, was absent, was sentenced to Jeffersonville Reformatory for from one to fourteen years. RIFLE SHELL IX APPENDIX. Benjamin J. Kremer, age nineteen, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Kremer, living near St. Magdalen, died during an operation for appendicitis. The boy's appendix was removed and found to be eleven Inches in length. It contained a twenty-two caliber riflo
cartridge. He swallowed It several days ago, it is believed, while hunting birds, when he held several of the small shells in his mouth while load. Ing the magazine of his repeating rifle ATE NAILS ASO HAIRPINS. Of the nine deaths when occurred during the last calendar year at th Indiana reformatory, six were due tc tuberculosis, In most cases of the pul
monary variety. Of the other three one was due to pneumonia, one that of Charles Fowler was a case of homicide, for which his slayer is now on trial, and one is, given as traumatic peritonitis. This was the case of convict Hess and was really a case of suicide, for death was due to a voluntary diet of nails, hairpins, lye and other indigestible materials taken in the Marlon County Jail before his commitment to the reformatory at Jeff err sonville. '" FNEI MOMA EPIDEMIC RAGES. Lafayette Is in the grasp of a pneumonia epidemic, and in the last week several have succumbed to the disease. This evening Mrs. John BUI died in St. Elizabeth Hospital from the. ailment. A week ago she and her three children were taken to the hospital from their home east of the city. The three children are still In a critical condition and they have not been Informed of
the death of their mother. The two hospitals are crowded with pneumonia patients and many are in a' dangerous
condition.
BITE CAUSE BLOOD POISONING. Miss Nora M. Frenzelmeier, of Lawr-
encburg, age thirty-one a trained
nurse, is in a serious condition suffering with blood poisoning. Miss Frenzelmeier attempted to kill a mouse
with ft stick of stove wood. She crippled the little animal and when, she picked it up the mouse bit her on ths right hand. Her hand will probably have to be amputated to check the spread of the infection. DESPONDENCY CAUSE OF SUICIDE. Benjamin Caldwell, of Marlon, age forty,' a member of the Modern Woodmen of America, committed suicide last evening in the Brown laundry, where he Wfes employed, by firing two shots Into Ills left breast near the heart. Caldwell opened his shirt front and placed the revolver Inside his shirt before firing. C. H. Brown, manager ot the laundry, found Caldwell as he was dying. The death of his wife ten years ago caused Caldwell to become morose and is believed to have produced th state of mind causing his act. He is survived by a widowed mother. MORRIS WINS FAME. Carl Morris, a former Rushvllle man, who has attained great success as a barytone soloist In New Tork, writes
TAFT SLIGHT FAVORITE After a week's Investigation Thb Lake Cocntt Times announces the result of & poll taken to ascertain the republican presidential - candidates of Lake county. The investigation covered the whole county from the lake to the Kankakee and every effort was made to 'get an honest republican expression. In a county with a population suoh as that of Lake it would to difficult to separate republicans and democrats, .consequently It is to be expected that democrats have contributed a little something to tbe story that the figures ell. In Thb Times poll Taft received 981votes and Roosevelt 92 J. Beveridge's popularity Is indicated .by a vote of 417. The votes cast for Taft,
a Roosevelt and Beverldge reflect the
sentiment of the party in Ijake as near as The Times could gather it. We deduce from the figures that Taft is a slight favorite and that ' the republicans of Lake are unanimously in favor of a good republican for the candidate. Lafayette Journal.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING arlves yon offer on yoor want HIGHLY S FECI AI.IZF.IJ PUBLICITY.
DAILY FASHION HINT.
4784
Becoming Dress for Girla. Illastrating a dandy dress for the school girL It opens entire length of front, which snakes it ess for laundering, as well a aiding the little miss in dressing herself. The Gibson tucks oa each aide fir ta.it popular broau. shoulder effect. Both woollens and wash fabrics can S utilised for this jrtss. Pattern No. 4.7S4 is cnt In 4 sizes, 6 te 12 years. Tbe S year size will require 34 yards of 36 inch material.
This pat.trt. can be obtained by . ' sending
his friends at Kuthvill that he would 10 cents to tfcs offic of this paper.
7
