Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 181, Hammond, Lake County, 22 January 1912 — Page 4
THE TIMES.
Monda3 Jan. 22, 1912.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
By Tae Lake Coutrty IT! at las and Pob. lUUif Company.
tory where the building of street railways is pioneering at the best (and is expensive pioneering at that) that exclusive rights must be given certain streets and through certain territory. If the city officials of either city at-
ury evening Times, "The. Tlmee." tempta to compel both lines to ac(Dally), application for entry.as see- . . 0 a ond-ciass man at the postofflct cept a common franchise oer any parHammond, ind., pending." (East Chi- ticular street or attempt to coerce ago and Indian Harbor).' Lake them into giving up any of the rights County Times (Country) j Lake County tney now have, no matter how mani-
xnxiva . evening; ; nmei porung jjattra, and Lake County Times (Weekly). Six editions.
festly unfair it Is for them to have these
rights, it will precipitate a deadlock
that will tie up the traction situa
tion in North township for five year.
If old administrations, that of A. F.
Chicago have made fatal mistakes in tying up
certain streets In Hammond for the exclusive benefit of the local line, this fact must be overlooked for the sake of the more Important matter of insuring the building of the extensions that are so badly needed for
Oary Office ..Tel 137 J the development of the district. East Chicago office. ...Tel. 478-R Both the llam,mond & East Chicago
JnalM naroor. tel. SiQ-K ,, t10 r.TV Tnterurhan line
Whiting.. Tel 80-Ml . . . ... .., Crown Point. Tel s re offenders against proposition A,
which is a manifestly fair require-
Adverttalng solicitors wlH be sent, or I ment.
.... i
,:.ns uvea on ippcllon. r-a u,mnlnni Whltinir A. East
if v.,-. . vi. w.lcnicaKO line seeas a siranumse uu
Entered at the Po,t office. Hammond, Ind., as second-class matter.
FOREIGN ADVERTISING lt Reotor Building
PUBLICATION OFFICES, Hammond Building-. Hammond, Ind. TELEPHONES, Hammond private exchange) Ill (Call for department wanted.)
Time notify the nearest have It promptly remedied.
LARGER PAID IP CIRCULATION THAS AST OTHER TWO NEWSPAPER" IX THE CAU'MET REGION. ANONYMOUS communications will not be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor, Times, Hammond, Ind.
office and State street in Hammond to uoium
bia avenue, thence on Columbia' avenue to Kane avenue, thence along the north side of the Nickle plate tracks
to Forsythe avenue, under the Gib
son hump Bubway to One Hundred
and Fifty-first street to Kennedy ave
nue, thence east on Kennedy avenue
to One Hundred and Forty-ninth
looked down upon at that time as!
dullards and even dunces. It's the old story of the gambler's money, "Come easy go easy." We have in mind a schoolmate who was regarded by all of us as the most promising member of the class. vHe was handsome, stylish, a regular heart-smasher with the ladies, quick at his studiesand of a pleasant and
easy-going disposition. In comparison with those about him he was superior
mentally, so that it seemed unneces
sary for him to put forth any effort
whatever in the accomplishment of
things.
The result was natural. He DIDN'T put forth an effort what
ever In the accomplishment of things.
Neither his mind nor his body re
ceived any development, and he is to
day a, nonentity, bis brilliance gone,
his brain undeveloped, and his power
of determination absolutely lacking.
A thousand such brains as his could
be put in a peanut, and they would
still have as much room as a bullfrog
in the Pacific ocean.
His case is by no means a singular
one. W e nave all observed dozens
like it, and the reason is evident to every thoughtful person. Brains caij
be acquired not by the shiftless, com
placent calf, which simply takes what
is given it and puts it on a shelf, by
the person who bends every energy
to increase his original stock.
Success Is not attained at a goal
It is not situated at a terminus. It
lies in the action. ,
street, thenca in westerly direction
Political Announcements
KOR-HERIFF , Editor, Times: , Please announce that I will be a candidate for sheriff of Lake county, subject, to the deolslon of the republican county convention. WM. KUSBRT, Tolleaton. Ind.
THE EXILE.
. I anrdown la Arizona Ob Its frtm-rHrrfd plains. The vrblte plague on my hollow checks, It fever la my vein. I am down unoa the desert.
"It a God-forsaken land, Where yon lire sat la the opes, 'Mssg the Me-krih and raenqulte, W'tth a rattler for a neighbor, Not the fHendlteat to saeety Where 70a fltna- yoaraelf upon a bunic wamnrirWrT head, And yon ahake the bloom In a; scorpions -- Fom the eorem af j-owr feed. . They say this country, way devrn here, la fall of predotvs arold. Its mountain filled with silver, And with countless wealth untold, .-. But I know another country. And my heart with Ions; Ins; Alls, Where the gold la in the sunset Upon Its purple nil In.
W here the silver's la a brooklet. And It's set with enverald, too, As it flashes la the' annlln-ht Of the meadow, ateallng thru. A coon try Go 'a own country, And my owa to sacrlflee, Sm call it fair New England, Bat 1 call It Paradise.
, Oh. I look oat o'er the sas;ebrnshy An I stretch my yenrntng hands O'er the Ions;, aahroka reaches, Of the desert's borates; sands, To a land where brooks are honest "When yonr linn are parched and drx, 1 Not the canon's clear, deceptive stream Of the tasteless alkaill. New Englaad has no monntalss .Kail of wealth and mines and rills, Bat I'd sjlve this whole damned country For one sight of Its green hills.
to Parrish avenue and north to Indi ana Harbor.
Should not the Green line exclude, from the rights on Columbia avenue
for the reason that it would prevent
any street railway company from run
ning the fun length of this street,
should it so desire? Shouldn't It also
bo excluded from Kennedy avenue,
which the Gary & Interurban wants, j and forced to take Melville avenue instead? The Gary & Interurban line seeks to extend its line north from its main
line on Kennedy avenue to One Hundred and Fifty-first street, thence in an easterly direction on One Hundred and Fifty-first streetto Parrish avenue and northward on Parrish avenue to Indiana Harbor. Now it is plain that the logical thing for the Gary & Interurban line to do is to continue northward on Kennedy avenue to Indiana Harbor and it is also apparent that the logical thing
for the Green line to continue in an
easterly direction on One Hundred and Fifty-first street to Parrish avenue and
thence to Indiana Harbor.
The attempt of the Gary & Inter
urban line to use One Hundred and
Fifty-first street and Parrish avenue, when it. already occupies a principal
north and south street, la palpably an effort to exclude the Hammond, Whit
ing & East Chicago line from this territory. . The promoters of these traction lines should understand that while the public is willing to grant them the fran
chises to make needed extensions that' it will not tie up through streets when the so'.e motive is to exclude compe
tition. Regarding proposition "B" city councils should j appreciate the fact that the same requirements can not be extended from Lake county traction lines that are exacted from these
same lines in populous Chicago ter
ritory.
A MILLION EYES
FOR ITS READERS
H
MY, WHAT A RELIEF!
Let there be no further apprehension
in Hammond because of lack of water and fear of fire. ;The adminlstra
tion organ ridicules the Idea. Manu
facturers, Insurance men," business
men, property owners, taxpayers and citizens don't know what they are talking about. Through you may suf
fer in your homes for lack of water,
the city is no danger from fire.
Silas says so. Be calm! .
ARDLY one person in . a
million realizes -what the
modern newspaper repre
sents. Tbe wireless, the cable, the
telegraph, the telephone, the elec
tric light, the railroad, the print
ing press, the typewriter, the lino
type, the wood pulp machine and
a hundred other .agencies are called
on by the newspaper.
IT IS TO THE WORLD WHAT
THE SENSORY NERVES ARE TO
THE BODY, BRINGING INTELLIGENCE OF WHAT HAPPENS IN
EACH REMOTE NOOK AND COR NER.
Like the sensory nerves, too, it
reports disturbance and pain more forcibly than ordinary happenings so that danger may be averted or
correctives applied.
THE NEWSPAPER GIVES ITS READERS A MILLION EYES AND
EARS, SO THAT. THEY MAY SEE
AND HEAR WHAT IS TAKING
PLACE ALL OVER THE PLANET.
ORDER THE HOME PAPER TO
DAY.
HEARD ' BY '- EUBE
his money out of current things.
BE careful with the- butter! FOR the benefit of newspapers taint
ed out of and circulated In Gary, we
wish to state that fn th litrr
minds of Garv neonlo. nnthlntr an
obnoxious as to read an editorial with honest admiration and find a few days later that It was taken, body and soul.
from l nele "Walt Mason's own works
Gary Tribune.
As the first words were "Walt Mason"
and the stuff was quoted and credited.
it indicates what wo have always in
sisted that it takes grandma's literary
mind about three days to find out any-
ENGLISH PRINCESS SOON TO VISIT UNITED STATES.
The Day in HISTORY
f
A DISPATCH from Hammond, Ind., under late date, declares that 5,000
men "in the Lake district cf the Calu-
"THIS DATE IX HISTORY" January 2'J.
1720 Inauguration of the famous
South Sea Bubble."
!774 British parliament Included i
Michigan with Canada. ! 1788 Lord Byron, the famous poet. born. Died April 19, 1824. 1793 Lewis Morris, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, died. Born in New York,. April 8. 1725. 1813 Defeat of the American troops at the River Raisin In Michigan. 1827 Duke of Wellington made commander-in-chief of the British army. 186-i Isaac Murphy inaugurated provisional governor of Arkansas. 1890 -Adam Forepaugh. veteran circus manager, died in Philadelphia. Born In 1831. 1901 Queen Victoria, died. Born May 24. 1819; 1906 Steamer Valencia wrecked1 off Vancouveriland, with loss of 129 lives. , - "THIS IS MY 70 TH BIRTHDAY" Angua MarGMHvray. 'Angus MacGUllvray. for many year3 one of the leaders in public affairs In
Nova Scotia, was born In Pictou
Co.unty, Nova Scotia, January 22. 1842
After completing his education at St.
Francis Xavier University, he studied
law and was called to the bar in 1874
Four years later he began his public career as a member of the legislative
BULLETIN: "The emperor of China aaaemDiy 01 .-ova scoua, 01 wnicn ooay
has abdicated his throne." Up to the
hour of going to press Alderman M. N.
Castleman was still clinging to his Job.
"3
i ' k .f'w.y."'.
t '.
If
w2JT'
met region" were that daj ready forlana a chum In the family garage,
tne ice narvest. Utner thousands Of BEFORE lone wa will be hearlne-
ice men elsewhere do hot expect their jsome patriot starting a sane Fourth of
"ice harvest" before next summer, says
he was elected Speaker in 1SS3 and served three years. In later years ho became a member of the Executive Council and of the Legislative Council
IF butter prices keep on soaring the and In 1902 he was appointed to the
way they do we will have to put our bench. Following his retirement from auto in the backyard and place a cowDubMc ufe Mr. MacGUllvray became a
the New Orleans Times-Democrat. No,
and they do not expect to realize here
before that time either.
July racket.
IF they ever make the Judicial recall
applicable to lawyers as .well aa to
Judges soma barristers will return to
where they belong.
HEADLINES in Times on Saturday:
Milk Producers Hold Meeting," had
reference to the dealers and not to any
Merrillvllle Hoisteins. ,
I-lfe'n Little, Tribulations. STEWED corn In the restaurants.
WILD west films In the nickel shows.
COLLARS as they are laundered. NO spoon in the sugar bowl. THE collector for Colliers' Weekly,
WHAT has become of the old fash
ioned girl who used to wear home
knitted sox?
.1
SOME fussy and facetious bachelor! 1F lt ,8 true that, firemen will be ex-
evidentlv wants to know whr th emP from paying taxes, tne town or
. . , . I -Miner win nave no trouble iorming its
uc lu uc Luia airing, we- volunteer fire department, npndfl lurerplv nn fhn iiimlin af hnt I .. .
r " - I CIRCULARS distributed to the em-
It will be somewhere between the wish 1 pioyes of the Gary steel mills recite
bone and the knee cap. that steel trust workmen, who do not
get less than $13,937.51, nor more than
"ONE of life's pleasant little sur
prises, says the Toledo Blade, "is to open the letter with nervous fingers and find a check huddled down In the
place where we expected a bill." Yes,
almost as big a surprise as finding a
stray nickel In a vest that you haven't
worn for some time.
lecturer on. constitutional history at S Francis Xavier University.
Congratulations to:
John A. Macdonald, editor of the
Toronto Globe, B0 years old today.
Maurice Henry Hewlett. English
writer and critic, 51 years old today.
Rev. Francis L. Patton, president of
Princeton Theological Seminary and former president of Princeton University, 69 years old today.
Up and Down in
INDIANA
I am doiva la Arizona -And I'm told I've got to atay Till the Angel GabrVrl blown bia trump Oat on the Jadjsmeat Day. I've beea bere three yeara already,
V A"d "M, -lagtie'a beid la check, j buildings in a new city it is a sure sign
.ua my nroacno ana tne pate hone
GREATER GARY.
When they begin to build five-story
Are Klagr neck, by aerk. But, eh Ciod! for old Sew England, As the lonely yearn nj byj Let. the pale borne beat ray bronehoy Take me home and let me die. John Warren Harper in Scribner'e.
of permanency and rapid growth
One structure of this height, is now
under way in Broadway. Terms of
real estate contract made public on
Saturday, stipulate buyers of 75 feet
frontage in Broadway just north of
Fifth avenue, must have completed
TRACTiqjN SUGGESTIONS. Ithis year a five-story structure cost-
In considering the traction situation iS not le83 tnan ?100,000
in North township there are two If Gary's growth keeps up at the propositions which are likely to the same pace two or three more years
bones of contention between the twoo8ht to bring it to the 'skyscraper
lines that are reaching out for addi- Before long six, eight and ten
tional rights in this locality. story buildings will loom up in Broad
In view of the fact that the boardswar- '
of Dublic works and city councils of And so Gary is to have a five-story
two cities will have to pass on each of these franchises, namely, the city officials of East Chicago and Ham
mond, the discussion of these propo-
theater devoted to the "legitimate
drama." It ought to pay. Gary is Just
j far enough away from Chicago to prof
itably stage the best plays. It will
CAPTT'IIE ROBBERS IX THE ACT,
Two negro robbers, one i them a
one-leggea man, were captured wun
the goods". in the Campbell department
store at Bloomlngton Saturday morn
ing. The men said their names were
I Henry Wilson, of Hammond, and Sam
uel Lewis, of Frederick City, Md
Patrolmen Hinkle and Stevens found a
j broken window In an alley and cap
tured Wilson, the cripple, as he was
H.Q00 a year, may buy fifteen shares crawling out of the window. Lewis
A HAMMOND hired srirl who took ot 8tock very year. Wonder what was chased about the building and
p-. j&r ill 1
1 m " S3' - iV&Cs t'
jlJxrtzvZ- CHJimjorYg r- from. Paint xingtyZasgfa
Plays and Players
mail. Eligibiea in Clay and adjoining of the fourth toe of the foot today. Wccountles are receiving Invitations to Hugh has been ip a Toledo hospital for
use his "matrimonial parlors" and their ten days, and was brought to Lafayadvantages are duly set out In care- ette yesterday.
fully written letters in which the Jus
tice explains his qualifications to per
form marriages and advises the re
cipients that he transacts business on
"strictly cash basis" and is ready to
answer calls day and night.
BIDIXG FOB HUSBANDS. Following , the. announcement that
nineteen teachers in the South Bend schools were married in the last year, over fifty applications for positions, all
from women, have been received frm out of town. Whether this Is due to
the activity of Dan Cupid is an open question. - Ever since he took office ' several years ago Superintendent John A. Wood has been constantly busy filling positions left vacant by teachers marrying. Last year there were nineteen such
her fifth 'Tillie'a
, Marie Dressier is playing New Tork engagement in Nightmare."
George- C. Dougherty, the 'father of Grace George, died at his home in New York recently. Marla'Cahiii made the first producton of her new piece, "The Opera Ball." In Utlca the other night. Mrs. Stuart Robson, with her own company. Is presenting a playlet, entitled "Mrs. Honey's Hoyenmoon." Louis N. Parker, author of "Disraeli." has undertaken to dramatize Charles
cai.?' . . ' . Klngsley's "Hypatla" for early produc
w nen ne maae puouc.mis i&tt ouy-
erlntendent Wood had no intention of launching a -matrimonial agency, but he thinks he has unwittingly done o, 'Judging from the applications now on
file.
tien.
After the holidays the Shubets Intend to produce a new muMcalcomedy, entitled "The Man With Three .Wives."
It Is said that Weber and Fields are
a new Job recently, kept her hat on
for several hours, because, as she ex
plained tothe lady of the house, she
didn't know how she was going to like
the new place.
would be done in case some 01 the xi.o J finally found standing between some
a aay laborers reel like ouymg tnirty or rulls. six dollars in money, a mesh
YOU cannot complain of a "tobacco
headache" In any of the local street
cars as in Chicago,, but the odor of
garlic frequently causes distressing
nausea.
WHENEVER you hear of some one
in Indiana Harbor or East Chicago call
ing the old barn a garage it is a dead I r wagon
sure sign that they have sold a few
lots lately.
forty shares.
Can Thin Be Hennery Coldbottlef
Dear Rube: I clipped this from yes
terday's Record-Herald:
"The Anheuser-Busch brewery
yesterday received a telephone mes
sage saying. This is Bob Pingle. I'm opening a saloon at Clark and Illinois streets and I want eight barrels of beer sent over here in a hurry.' Her
man Miller, an agent of the brewery. Investigated and found Robert Pingle, 2J40 Lincoln avenue, in a vacant saloon at North Clark and Illinois
streets. Miller summoned the police
and Pingle was locked up.
DO you suppose that this is the wat-
PONTUS HEINTZ.
the tip
u in Dt.rt tne circumstances It be
comes quita evident that Mr. E. M. Lee Governor Marshall's appointees in these
PONTUS We have turned
over to Sherlock Block!.
AN Iowa woman laughed so much
that it took three doctors and a bottle
of cMorofornt to bring her around.
Chances are that she had read that
uiu not, wisn rresiaent Tart a very
happy new year a few weeks ago.
woods were working day and night in
behalf of his presidential ambitions.
bag, and several handkerchiefs alleged
to have been taken from the store were fov.nd on the prisoners. Tha negroes pleaded guilty rU police court.
RIDES MAD BILL TO DEATH. Russell J. Nowlin, age twenty-five.
manager of the Pella stock farm, near Lawreneeburg, In Miller township, was attacked by an enraged bull. Nowlin was tossed high In the air by the mad
dened animal and alighted astride its
back. He managed to retain his posi tion while the bull pitched, bucked and plunged to throw him oft until it sank exhausted in the snow and died. A
veterinarian, who examined the dead animat stated that the bull died of hydrophobia. Nowlin was not seriously
Injured.
EXMAS EGGS ARE CHICKS. Believing in the good interrtlnon of
three hens which expressed a desire to
set, Mrs. W. R. Jones of Elwood purchased three dozen eggs at 30 cents a dozen en Christmas das, placing them beneath the hens, and yesterday morn-
iwllllna- to com together again if busl-
COLD IILIS 1.SOO SQUABS. neM deun can bo satisfactorily arDuring the past two weeks, 1,800 rarigedsquabs at the American squab farm of Franctt Wilson will postpone the proLafayette have been frozen to death. ductlon of his new play, "The SpiritNever before has the farm lost squabs -..i... - and continue in "A Bachelor's
Baby." Already the tour of "The Garden of Allah" Is being booked. The spectacle
because of the cold weather.
EX-SENATOR. SERIOlStY ItJU Suffering with gangrenous blooi poisoning in his left foot. John F. McHugh, of Lafayette, former state senator and general counsel for the Monon railroad, was taken to St. Elizabeth hospital yesterday. Dr. Barnom. of Toledo, and Dr. Hupe, of Lafayette, performed an operation for th removal
will open the Auditorium Theatre in Chicago next fall. The Nora Bayes-Jack, Norworth Musical Company possesses the distinction of presenting the longest act ever in polite vaudeville. It occupies an hour.
'WHEN some girls break an engagement they simply transfer the sparkler
to the other hand, which is an easy
way out of it.
1 y
sitions is timely and THE TIMES have all or Lake and most of Porter suggests that in the Interests of a county to draw from. Michigan City satisfactory solution of the traction people would come to Gary to see a problem that they be made a matter good Bhow. of public policy. These propositions T!s newspaper has always said are: that; once there was good interurban PROPOSITION "A" That the city facilities that we could see the best officials of both cities look with dis- plays without leaving the sand dunes, favor upon the franchise of any com- The rapid advancement of Interurban pany which seeks, by the routing of railway building, between - Gary and its proposed extension, to exclude the surrounding points, certainly had a opposing traction lines from the ter- great deal to do with the decision to
ritary it desires to enten 'or whichlhuild a first-class playhouse
seeks by unnecessarily running over
a thoroughfare (meaning a through street) to exclude any prospective traction line from gaining access to the district.
intr thlrtv-three chickens were hatched
THE DUKE of Connaught will soon ,ndk..tlons ,r .that all the littK
visit New Tork, and In this connection J ,n fluffy things will live. Mrs.
we might mention that H. R. H.. the Jones beiieves she holds the state rec Duke of Ridge road, will visit Ham- ord tnlg year for eariy chickens, mond very shortly. w ftiai.v histobv.
1 a uiu'" - - ---- - - -
K. a-TOU are mistaken aoout tne t , . Nwlln. of piginfield. age eighty,
Valpo women shaking their table cloths j elent who has lived practically all his
out into the Dackyara. tney aon 1 u ,1(e ln Hendricks county, has many in
tablo cloths 1n Porter county. terestlnar reminiscences of the early
DUN and Bradstreet report record J hlstorv of Indianapolis. He says he
This is I made many trips to that city before
FROM the tone of these straw votes
it is amazing what a number of presi-l movements of cash" last week
dents we are going to have elected in I untrue as far as we are concerned, aslth bridge was built across White riv
November ' a11 ot ours wa" moved by Dec. 24. er and all traffic in and out of the city
DESPITE the efforts of the esteemed went across tne river un a i-ir0au
Homelv ladles' Journal s articles on I At that time, he says, there were only
. . ,. . . . . m r n n n i.WA A. .V,.AA ctflTPU thA nrinclnfll AHA
. r . txt i i . - , . 1 now 10 live niraiuriauLV on sa.vuu x i v v v " - - -
AjrAlil we seen imonnauon aDOUt I . ... . . .,, ,,. r. PcllAnirr anil Tra 1 nf ,, ,lr,alil to rnana era I belnir owned by Jreter r euenaer ana ira
the old-fashioned man who is always jit. j Thayer. One load of produce wouil
yelping for an old-fashioned winter. what Hnm. r r id friend si he market at that time, heays.
Lew Darrow, lord mayor of Laport. Haven't s'eo him since Mrs. Gunness was
"WOMEN cry away pain and men j last found
cubs it away, says an observing doc- Chicago
tor. And neither are successful.
PLODDER VS.- GENIUS. - . Many of the boys and girls who
gave the greatest promise of success
WHAT sort of a winter is this anyway? Wild geese, robins, bluejays flying. What has come over nature? ,
SPEAKING of worries, some women
PROPOSITION "B" That in order J twenty "years ago have not amounted are more of a worry to themselves than
to finance a traction line in a terrl-' to as much as some of those who were a whole family of children.
NEWS says that some
Indians are editing a western newspa
per. As a matter of fact most editors
are good Indians.
The state house had not been thought
of and there was no railroad or turn
uike into the city.
Newiln has always been a member of
the Friends' church, and. In the early
days, was a Whig. When that party
became the Republican party he voted that ticket and has never Voted any
UNDERSTAND that the union bar- other ticket in his life. Newiln is be
lleved to be the oldest man in Hend ricks county. MAHKIKS OX CASH BASIS.
George E. Law, of Brazil, Justice o
the Peace, who has a reputation for
the large number of marriages he ha
bers will not support any politicians
who wear beards. This will make it
hard on Mr. Fairbanks.
NOTICE how lean and hungry the I
sparrows look? Then throw a few
scraps out on the snow for them.
A GAS magnate is one who doesn't care J performed, has adopted the "follow up
a fig for the past or future, as he makes ayatem" of advertising his business by
TIMES FASHION DEPARTMENT
DAILY FASHION HINT.
rAIXY FASHION HTJffT.
Ladies' Shirt Waist.
The Gibson style of shirt waist confines In favor, good example of this type being here represented. The Gibson tucks it
5G03
Simple and Dressy Waist.
The entire effect of tbia waist dependi . . .Im tnba and ntaDfllnff mllar mnA J
front may be released at auat depth r additional bertha collar and correthey may be stitched to the waist line.. sponding cuffs. For tbe making, linen, silk, lawn or dim- Striped Uk. French Cannel cashmere " , -.m-tli and many of the novelties in woollen Sty may be utilized. and ., ,n the Tar5ou crtp. The pattern. No. 5. 04. ... cut In alx weave" will be found effective made ia sizes. 32 to 42 inches, bust measure. To this style. make the wafst for 3C bust will require 2 , The Peirn, 5,003. te ctit in sires 32 to
quires 2Vi yards of 36 inch material. Tbe above pattern can be obtained by ending ten cents to ton office of thia rnper.
yards of 3G-inch material. Tbe above patte?n can be obtained by tending 10 cects to the office of thia paper.
