Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 102, Hammond, Lake County, 26 September 1912 — Page 4
THE TIME
NEWSPAPERS
llahloK Coniftar,
Puk.
Tfm.. M Lak County
Saturday ,114 Sun
... omei, otiif ticept Sundii
,,0: Tb L"- Count,
groir and weekly edltloa.
entered Jan. 10. nU: Th. T1mei. daI)y txept Sunday, entftred Jan. IS. Ill, at
potornc at Hammond. Indiana.
- ....r in) aet or March t. 117a.
Zotered at
" ""cona-ciaaa matter. rURKICK ADVERTISING U Rector Bulldln
tne Postofflca. Hammond.
UFFICS. Chicago
PUBLICATION OFFICES.
n.mmoia sulldin.
Hammond. Intf,
-" 'or aewrt.Bnt irante4L)
Hammond
Gary Of flea Est Chicago Office. Indiana Harbor Whiting; Crown Point Hegewich
Tel. 137
Tel. 54
-Tel. 349M; 150 Tal. 80-M Tel. 61 Tal. 1
Advertising solicitors will rates given on application.
be at, or
It rou have any trottDie -ettln Ttsa
o"ry tne nearest ofn:e and
-" promptly remedied.
rxK.r.,i PAID IP CIRCILATIOI
- UTUK TWO 12 W -
rrtl1" THB CALUMET REGION.
lUnVTUrtTt
j communications will At k. IK A f . .
- -w-wu. out otners will fee
ciecretion. and ahood be
"'""a to Editor. Time. Haxn aaorvd. Ind.
WILLIAM
For HOWARD T A FT.
Against FREE TRADE AND FREE SOI P.
Hammond Commander-, No. 41 K. T will visit Gary, Wednesday. Sept. 25 when South Bend wiU confer the Malta degree In full form. Leave Sibley and Hohman 6:30 p. m. Hammond Chapter. Xo. y?, H. a. M will meet Tuesday, Sept. 24, 'ins toad of Wednesday, Sept. 25. Mark Master degree.
A JOKE.
i-ass prosperity around," yelps
ice Indianapolis Star. T 1 -
x 11 arouna: Why, everybody has his hands in it up to the
elbows these many days. What are
you talking about?
iuu are getting yours, aren't you?
A VOICE FROM OLD TIMES.
puiiosopner, observing the
unmistakable evidences of unpreced
i"uo'). in tne cosmetic
trade which force themselves on
mere man wheresoever he intrudes and informed as to continuing en t h 11 c(o tiT-t-t i .
i,Je present styles of feminine garb, has not recalled thia passage in "The Decline and Fall of
tne Roman Empire:" That rare and elegant luxury Oilk) was censured !n the reign of Tiberius, by the gravest of the Romans; and riiny, in affected
""'"'f language, nas eon-
thirst of gain, which last confines of the
pernicious purpose
public fje
I lr FOR THE npAY
FROM
"ADDRESS T( I.I II)''
THE IACII
O yet wha' arc Sae pious and Ve've nought to
lour neighbor's Whase life is ilke
supplied wi stor o' water, The heapet hnpper'H ebbing still And still the dap plays clatter.
suid yoursel', sae holy.
10 out mark and tell
faults and folly, a weel (?aun mill
le see your state wi' theirs And shudder at the niffer.
imic east a moment's fair What makes the mighty Discount what scant occasi
1 nat purity we pride in. And (what's aft matr than a' the lave) Your better .irt o' hl-.lin.
compared
rpj:i rd. differ? in save
scan your brother man r sister woman; may gang a kennins
dark.
Then gen'lv
Still gontl.
Though tiiev
wrang. To step aside is human ;
One point must still be prni,-
The moving' g, why thev do it.
And just as lamelv can ve mnru-
How far perhaps they rue it.
Who made the heart, 'tis ire alone Decidedly cat: try us. t one.
He knows enoh chord
Each sprint;, its various Idas;
Then at the balance lef. h.. ,,,,!.
We never can adjust it;
What's done we nartlv m:lv .-nmntite
Hut know not what's resisted
Robert Turns.
DEPARTMENT of Agricultures estimate of the 1!H2 crop: 2.93.,000,ooo bush.
'icat fo,000,O00 bush
ats 1,290,000,000 bush.
Parley 203,000,000 bush "ay 72,000,000 Ions. Worth millions of dollars mort:
nirtii any tuner crop ever raised in
America. Agitator: "If the to grow I'm lost."
THE TIMES.
ty 1111 ..
u r understand it, the high
cost of furnaces an Hocking Valley
grow any less this
Thursday. Sept. 20. 1912.
crops continue
WHERE do all the peaches come
from? Chicago Tribune. Well, most
ot those you see getting off Eake
.-uure trains at uasaiie street come
from Hammond, East Chicago and (!ary.
HOT STUFF TO SAVE SOULS. Bill Sunday Reported in East Liverpool Morning Tribune: Churches should not become third
rate amusement houses
It is a shame that church people
have to go around begging like ho
boes in back alleys.
There is always some miserable
old carcass who belittles any work that makes for God.
The IxDrd is always on the job;
you will never catch Him nnvmine-
upon than
demned the
explores the
earth, for the
of exposing- to the
i urapenes and transparent matrons. A dress which showed the turn of the limbs, and color of the Hkin. miKht gratify vanitv, or provoke desire; the silks which had been closely woven in China were sometimes unravelled by the Fhoenlolan women, and the precious materials were multiplied by a loser texture, and the intermixture of linen threads The editor of Mr. Gibson's work Is at pains to say that his author "must have written 'transparent draperies and naked matrons.' Though sometimes affected he is never inaccurate." The reader is at liberty to make the transposition of adjectives. We shall not. The sense of the passage in its unamended form Is as clear as is its application to the manners and customs prevailing in the twentieth century of the
Christian era
DOCTOR urges that people wiggle their toes for at least five minutes each day. Nonsense. We'd always be grabbing the bed clothes these cold nights and jerking them off.
and if the ugly and hateful, the drab and dreary could be banished to some far away limbo of lost things
and if we could appreciate this sudden loveliness our souls and minds would grow and develop and become fit to receive a different aspect. Thus working from within neon'e would
hange and every one would be . 1
uapeiy and comely to look
with a beauty that is deeper
the mere surface U HTlAf.1 I" ci
The great artists of ail times
painted their aspirations upon can
vas, and the ideals of those long dead
aid us in the !if- of tod-.v -ri ,...i
ounded out life has work and plav
and aspiration in it. We all have
our work, we all h.ivo c.,,
let us not forget the inspiration and
the happiness that comes to us from such aspiration. And the 'galleries, the art shops, the prints are all wait
ing to help us to this inner hamuness
It is our fault if we fail to realize or to make opportunities to u.e that
am and our gain when
Jl T as well to get mother to be shaking the mothballs out of the heavy ones.
is not goin winter.
to
OF
COURSE you have heenn o
notice that the days are shortening since the autumnal equinox also Roosevelt's temper;
ABOUT REGISTERING. We cannot, even at the risk of seeming impertinent, refrain from informing you that if you don't register you will lose you vote. Listen! Look at it this way. You may have decided now that you don't want to vote this year and on October 7 von refuse to register. Hut something may come up in October that mav
make you want to vote in November
hut if you haven't registered that's !
an the good it will do von. So reg
ister and be on the safe side; then
if you rlon't want to vote VOu don't
have to.
ACCORDING to a Gary newspaper
uiiusnij; lactones to a citv 1-liK
.Must think a factory is kind of a cut worm
some
ANI still the Standard Oil corn-
pan ames that tt has any interest
present political campaign.
: n
the
SIMPLY LEGAL PRACTICE.
we do.
poll
Wilson and of It. in-
The effect of the sixty-day poll was to eliminate Taft and Pur-
cm in Indiana. The thirty-day
w;il fro far to prove Ralston also are out dianapolis Star.
WE shall save the above and re
print it on Wednesday, November 6, just to show the Star what a horribie example of a discredited gucsser it is.
EVERVTIME we see a dog we feel sorry for the fh
Mexican as.
THE BUTTON MAKER.
is
of 120
languages
It
IN LIEU of these, popularity voting contests for baseball heroes, we suggest a hero contest so that the third termer would have a chance to vote for himself.
IF ONLY WE ALL COULD.
It is said that could see only around them they become lovely of
feature. Certain it is could have only those are beautiful upon all
if human beings beautiful things themselves would form and fair of
that if we objects that sides of us
not long since a convention editors of papers in foroicm
declared for Taft and
many of them have probably reprinted the true story of the button mak
er, who pleaded for Ti rrt Of f Inn
During the hearings prior to the
adoption ot the McKinley tariff there were rumors that buttons would not receive proper consideration. A Hun
garian who knew the trade as an v.
pert appeared before the committee
and described the old world conditions. He contrasted American with
foreign shops. .American with foreign wages. American standards of com
fort with those of Hungary, and
muue so practical an argument that the older men thought of Georee
Stephenson, the mine laborer, tell
ing of his locomotive. Roswell P
i-lower saiu: "mats the best speech
l have heard this session."
T m
.wan a foreign born mechanic is
like the Hungarian button maker Wet H a g-r n .1 .11 i ,
. !..- .uioyaieu oiu w orm and new
world life, and has bettered himself by coming here: he has won nnr.or-.
't-t"
tunnies for his children that Europe couldn't give him and he does not wish to see our home market flooded by cheap foreign goods. Some of the best speeches for protection do not get into print they are made in factories and mines, on the wharves of seaports and in western harvest fields. There are men from Germany, Sweden. Hungary, Russia, Poland, Italy, Roumania and Greece who understand what protection has done for them and their families.
WOMAN says the ideal husbands are as scarce a.s dodos. Well, we've seen pictures of dodos, but never met an Ideal husband face-tface.
BEING a policeman In West Hammond is taking a great chance of leaving a wife a widow and children fatherless.
Judge Johannes Kopelke is on the right trail in his suggestions for the simplification of the code of procedure in civil actions. The theorv
of the farmers of the constitution in
making the only qualification for a lawyer, good moral character, was that it ought to be the nrfvileo-o of
everybody to appear in court and
defend himself or his property.
anyone iroin tne constitutional right
to practice law, but they could and did make court procedure so difficult that the untaught lawyer had no
chance against the man who had
tieen trained in the technicalities of
the practice . N T .. I T - , .
uw juuse ivopeiKe comes out in favor of a reform In procedure that will simplify it again and reduce the practice of law to its lowest
terms.
mat a ut-e, one common sense
provision Is section ." in his sugges tions. This section reads. "A com r.l.i f n 1. .,11 1 , . ....
piaiuL naii pe suincient it tne cause
of action is so stated therein that
ii win ce understood by a person of
common education and intelligence, and if the judgment thereon will bar another suit. No greater certainty is required in answers and replies." For Instance, it is ridiculous to be compelled to state In a complaint that the Michigan Central railroad is a corporation operating under the laws of the state of Indiana. That is a matter of common information. And why should it be necessary in a divorce complaint to allege that the plaintiff and the defendant are married when the presumption is that they are or they would not be seeking a divorce. And to show how lawyers inconvenience themselves for the sake of following precedent, or the present code of procedure; take the complaint in a damage suit. If you have occasion to present
several pnases or a situation and do
so in four or five tiiiraeranha it k
necessary for you to make each paragraph a complete complaint. If the second paragraph of the complaint substitutes but one word for another it is necessary to copy
all of the allegations in the first from
the beginning to the end.
it is impossible to say. "in addition to the foregoing the plaintiff complains of the defendant and says, 'etc., etc.," or, 'the facts are as
previously alleged except that, etc.,
i- ,en . i on nave got. to go
through the whole rigamarole. And that is why a lawyer's business is a large bluff and pretense. He knows he could go into court, with a complaint that simply stated "John Jones beat his wife within an inch of her life and she does not care to take any more chances in double harness with him," and earn $r getting a divorce decree, but he would rather write up a beautiful
and highly technical complaint, make a great splurge at performing
real service and get $2T for it. Judge
Kopelke's simplification should be carried throughout practice.
NEW Orleans cow gaVe birth to
triplets and they were mimed after
the three presidential cr,r,H,',i
ish it was over. You mn-t
what queer things they will do next.
heard! 1 rube I TAFT OPTll IX place of warm politics give us I U w arm stoves. I a AXI) warm lu I term i ! k. Old Doc b- ' bott. " T 1 I I- 1 .......
I ' I,, e of good govern- N meat is prosperity. Thank vou Mr in
Taft.
. HER PET.
?-' A . hh hrtt!.
w i ' .
i
SIIC OF SUCCESS THE FALL ELECTIO
IS
I.V additi that tinio
couples besil WK use J t prize stories
St. Can; large in
nitf ht.
lb be
l-.ad
in ore
am
the mem!"
links to read in
its citizens wer' i cows run at larpe
-tl
n
This i. b ! a rn e
is sti the i
THE piano workers are threaten
ing to strike in the east; but the
piano piayers in the next flat
till on the job.
are
NOW if there was only some sort
of a tax placed on politician.:
n to other things this is f the year when married n to complain of cold feet.
think that we told some Hut that dispatch from
savin- that the crops are so
.Montana that the fun,.,
t r
o.ii ot t heir houses to store t'ue srain in the par!
nen rooms mokes Us envious. GlvE: It must be awfully trri'.iie" to
rs of the new Hammond tolf
The Timks that four of fined for letting their
in the streets.
IOT.li IP ! "S I" w I ke f.-nn i nnve.
COST." Headline of one Chicago news
paper yesterday. Farmer Hovs Blamed t u:..i. .. . ... t
o, imkii . osi ot i.ivinp-. Headline of
second Chicam newsnaner vtrrfav
ail riKiit so 1 ..ins a.s they rlon't he nooj- newspaper men
NOTICK by the health reports that Uncle Sam's suriron.s have cured all of Porto liieo's rino.ooo natives of the hookworm disease. Good chance now for the surgeons to attend to the sad
cases down at Marion. Richmond
Fort Wayne. NOW when Brother A. I Knottseets
his betless racetrack srnin mi..i
prints; when T. H. pets the farmers
receiving more, while the consumers
pay less, and when Prince A I Reverldsje Kets the invisible government out of
operation, etc.. etc.
RKA1 in our Crown Hoint corre
spondence that the ridpr.nr.- 1
working overtime. And just remem- '
her that a few weeks hence when things begin to ferment, the printngpresses will be workinR double time
lening anout the first class jag-s some of the natives have
THAT is a ni.'e aesthetic idea of Edi
tor Carr of the 'steemed Garv Trib He
urges that the steel trust plant
trees along the track vUviiinnD , .1..,.
tne property owners won't have to view land the ugly steel mills when they look tojThe
n- noun. uy an means let the work be carried out. Take a popular vote1 and determine whether apple, plum or' lemon trees should be planted. Might I as well get fruit as noil oc cv,...i j
- .TH, I'll , clll.l l then how nice it would be for passen-!;i
gers on the fast trains passing through the fit y. All that they would need to do would he to stretch out their paws and pluck the luscious rruit. Great Ideal Rut forhevvins sake look out for the worms!
York, Sept. 2.1. president prepare,! interview i.-sued declared that bis recent 1
o .-ii-uKm were entitled to
repealed tnat ho believed he , elected and "ave bi--
uenying tuat lie had been
ine. as he ula r 'n't.
ana
He analyzed tho saw it. maintain republi. ans wi!! and hold enoug
to
Taft, last laims
respect. would
for
over-sangu-
niate resu! .Middle
"Five or
serted generally
party
INDUSTRY
I N D I A IN A
Max Livingston has hn H. Mitchell two on South Michigan
political situation ;ing that the regcarry the solid ii of the central
western states to win
The president made these statenients at the home of his brother, Henry W. aft. where ;, went on his arrival from Washington late Monday and received a number of his friends
associates. The president's
and political
interview follow
I KensonnMy Sure of Election. "When I declared a few week ago tluu I felt reasonably sure of my own election in November and of th rpub-Ib-an party. I was regarded by some as entirely over-sanguine and unaware of the situation. "Today, however, after a number of indications that the republican nartv
!I the dominant party, and that xpected growth of democratic
strength has faiied to materialize, my only declaration is shown to he entitled to respect. The republicans necessarily will have a reduced majority over UtOS! because of the presence of three tickets in the field, hut the democratic party will suffer also. The combined strength of tie third-term party will not be enough to change the u'tl
est llrliaialile (.round.
1 weeks ago, it was as-
that the republican
would secure the vote of th.
son,) east, including all of the Xewuf3,t"re England states, with the exception ofltra,Jp-
.Maine and Vermont, that the demo
"1UI- I'anj would maintain its hi ti,. . ... 01 ...
...e .-000 soutn. and that the term party would secure the
esi. leaving only the middle
aenatahle ground. "Today with the election still one month away, the republican party finds itself with a strenghened hold on the solid south, and that the third-term party would secure the solid west. leav-
'"8 omy me middle west ground.
"Toda
South Hendbought from J
business blocks street for Stfo.ooo
Oonnersville The Kreli Auto-Grand Piano company will establish a branch factory in one ' wing of the McFarlan motor oar fgQtoi y, where it w ill man-
plijfer piano parts fur the
d on
third-solid
west as
debatable
with
the election still one
month away, the republican party finds itself with a strengthened hold on the solid east, having routed the third-term party in Vermont, and the democratic party in Maine. The third-term leaders recently conceded that we would pick the state of ftah out of th solid west, and after conferring with rhalr-
...co ninifs ana others recently west, there is every reason to that the republican party wi!
n nigan. ashlngton. Idaho
ming. .Moreover, if t
a campaign is
Natural its gas than it shows a
Shelbyville The Citizens' Gas company has turned o:) line. The supply js greater has been in many years. It
pressure of eight ounces In this city. I.aporte The Rnmley Manufacturing company has announced that it will build a new plant for the manufacture of orchard tractors. Cine thousand men will be employed and several hundred homes will be built for the;occupancy. South Rend This city is suffering from a shortage of fourteen thousand tons of anthracite coal, according to
u.hicis. w ri o say they have less eight hundred tons in their
Many
than a rd s.
to
many
In the
to believe will carry and Wvo-
he proper kind of
waged, we will oarrv
. ! rsran. Kansas and Minnesota the third-term strength has
"J'"'i since the recent tour
fiat section by th
party's
where
rapidly through
candidate.
's are operat-
Up and Down in INDIANA
tusk seen
the largest
EMII.Y HWE ARROW EM
Ihe timely discovery of
THEN again a town has to take on a pretty metropolitan aspect before if. can afford a country club, THM Chi. -ago Trlbun- prints that its want ad columns contain more demands for help than ever before. Kvcp it has to admit that Mr. Taft. has brought us the days of plenty. MANY conscientious man spends weary hours .le term in ing whether his
creditors snail !iVe In luxury
er tie shall bv buying an
in:.
a broken
steering knuckle on the touring oar of Mayor .lames H. Edwards of Alexandria probably saved the lives of Mr.
Mrs. Kd wards and their two sons, car was traveling twentvlflve
miles an hour when the mayor heard a clicking noise. Instantly turning off the power and applying the emergency brake, the mayor brought the
r to a stop with the front wheels few feet from a high precipice lead
ing to the creek bottoms of Rine creek.
of its kind ever
people of this localitv h.,i.
10 feet 2 inches long and 24 inches in circumference. it broke into three Pieces when taken from the ground The find was made in marshy ground
, oepm or tour feet. The djt
1 were h.dward Klines, I
1 and .John Hemmer.
nicycMvr
-oga n
'hers
Kimes
It is
whet h-
autotnohile.
"tF Caesar came into the and for a spec thony Fronde, ti e same thing
RUCK V
is
!t
the
it may he said that he world at a special time la! object." James AnVes. and T. II. thinks of himself.
the man who has n n.-ie
burner stored up in the attic. No
v. . ,11 i.-ome wan iiKe tiis steam heat tl
'remren nave to undergo pendin
get-ready spirit of the Janitor. "MIGHT VOTES IN ONE FAMILY FOR TAFT." Timks' headline. Seems
now that down at Dyer instead of trying to raise the largest pickles the,-
n for the largest families.
iiAUi is now
the place where
ITT IT OVIZR OFFIC'F.RS. With a policeman guarding, the fire chief overlooking, the mayor constantly advised and the chief of police holding the telephone to his ear, the
I't n nsyh ania Railway company at KoIkonio crossed North Washington street forbidden territory, with its third j track this afternoon. When the offiicials realized tiiat the company had stolen a march on the city they ob
tained an injunction, hut by this time "it was all over." City Attorney Hereon says that the city compel the company to remove the tracks, but it is expected that the Pennsylvania will make a hard fight to retain its vantage.
F.t;iF.i:ii (OMi'tirrKs mink. George V. Sturtevant, government hydraulic engineer, has completed the
work of going over the route
plans for the proposed Hozeman leve
and drainage ditch along the
an.l White rivers in this and I'osey county near Princeton. Mr. Sturtevant was brought here by the Farmers' Protective association, organized to protest against the Improvement on the grounds that it is impractical and would cost land owners more than it
I.IIIF.S Sf'Hooi, nov
The police are searching for a colored bicyclist who earlv todav ran
down Charles Hurton. of Anderson. 12 : years old, while on his way to school. The boy was crossing at Twelfth and Main streets when the negro ran into .him. throwing him to the pavement iand rendering him unconscious. Instead of stopping to see how badly his ! victim was injured the rider hurr!d-
y f-uaie.1 away rrom the scene feared Rurton may not recover.
TR V'X ITIIIKF.S TKOI.I.KV
j The T. H., I. & E. traction car due jat Frankfort at 4:32 was struck by ,the eastbound Clover Leaf passenger train at the Main street crossing in this city this afternoon. Good work on the part of the motorman saved the interurban car from serious results, as he forced his car ahead at ;fuU speed until it was almost across (the tracks. The rear end of the car 1 was badly damaged. No one was hurt, j WII.I. F.HF.CT A NOTIIKR 11, A XT. j ft has become known that the RumpI ly company of Raporte will erect a new ' plant for the manufacture of what will be known as the Orchard tractor. Em- . pioyment will be given to 1.000 men.
At a conference today between Mayor I 'nrrnw and Or. E. A. Rumely. the as-
'surance was given that I.aporte would I build l.ono new houses in addition to
! ine to... t in fr , 1 -., a r.r ... ...
and! " ' ' 01 oripirucuon
ana Rijifrni nunarea in prospect. There
ratoku i"'iui"i in.! me piant may he
lo.Mieu m lucnmona, ind.. or Battle Creek, Mich.
r the dealers are without a tr.
. 1 , ...
10 iid.ru corn, while some have fifty
mxi ions on hands. They have
orders theV can not till. Gary For the first time in r,,.
years Ii road way property was placed on the market here Saturday by the Oary Rand company, a subsidiary of the United States steel corporation. Fourteen lots were sold at an average, of J250 a front foot. Business block;)!1 which will cost $2mi,om0, ale beinlj!
outit, and all of the mil ing full cnpacltv.
Terre Haute More than one hundred men at the local branch of the American Car and Foundry company went on strike Saturday night, and others are expected to go out. Tru-y do piece work and complain that there, is such delay in handling the cars that.
jthey can not mike living wages. The j men do not belong to unions. About a
tnousnnd men are employed. Anderson Following a letter from the postmaster-general, instructing him to use his own judgment in the matter. Postmaster Hardle has restored regular service to lock boxes for mail on Sunday. The postofrice clerks said the change wa of no benefit to them because they had to work overtime on Monday and nt high speed
overcome the congestion of mail.
to
WAIST OF TAFFETA TRIMMED WITH NET
was worth. The proposed levee is
getting new fame as more than seventy miles in length, its t'ney date-line the dis- ! est imated cost S'lbiimO. and it would
pat. r.es aoout tne only western race ' a ff ect se vera 1 hundred thousands track In captivity. L,.r..E in h t,.-., ,..,,,,;..
"WOMEN should wear more clothes."
states a divine. Wei' they'll all 1.0,11,-
ing for the heavy wardrobes if this chilly weather keeps up.
of
FIX! tisk The tusk of a earthed by ditch mith farm near
of m tsi'onn, mastodon was undiggers at the O. P. Warsaw today. Ths
WOI XOF.I) MIX IS IXDH'TF.U. Walter C. Alsman of Sullivan, 2S years old. who was shot here through the head in a recent gun battle at Dug-g-r. In which William Shepherd was killed and several other participants were shot, has been indicted by the grand Jury on a charge of assault with intent on Arista Turpin. Alsman is In j.iil here. Re remained in a precarious condition for several weeks. Thomas Shepherd, his uncle, under a. similar indictment, has furnished bond. He has Hsked an appeal of his case from the county. .
j.:.c , ;: r..v-i"'J-sN mmkm I P
Here Is an effective waist of champstrne colored taffeta trimmed with a diagonally mounted hand of embroidered net. Yoke of white lace finished by a tie of brown satin. The cuffs are trimmed with the embroidered net and finished by plaited frills of tulle. Brown crystal buttons Lr4ua waist aad. cyJTi,
