Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 145, Hammond, Lake County, 18 November 1912 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

Monday, Nov. 18, 1012.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS By Tae Lake rnntj Prlatlax Hi Polk. linhlas Com pan jr.

I Or for A 111 1 &Mf iDAY

Understand that Gary has a bache-J innovation that coud possibly have no lor Club and we should like to hear I deleterious effects.

that one of the members ig happy befor Christmas tide gets in.

The Iak County Times, dally except Sunday, "entered aa second-class matter June SS. UOfi"; The Lake County Times, dally except Saturday and Sunday, entered Feb. S. nil; The Gary livening Times, daily except Sunday, nnlered Oct. 5, 1S09, The I,ake County Times, Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO, 1911; The Times, daily except Sunday, entered Jan. 13, 1912, at the pomofflce at Hammond. Indiana, ail under the act of March 3, 171.

Entered at the Potofflc Hammond, Ind., as second-class matter.

rOBKIBX ADVERTISING OFFICES, 812 Rector Building - - Chicago

PCBUCATIOI OFFICES. Hammond Building, Hammond, Ind. TELEPHONES, Hammond (private exchange) Ill (Call for decartmont wanted.) Gary Office Tel. 137 Kant Chicago Office Tel. 5A0-J

Indiana Harbor Tel. 349-M; ISO Whiting Tel. SO-M Crown Point Tel. 63 llesewlsch Tel. 13 Advertising- solicitors will be snt, or rates given on application. If you have any trouble getting The Times notify the nearest office and hive It promptly remedied.

LARGER PAID TP C1RCVLATION THAN ANY OTHER TWO NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALCMET REGION.

ANONYMOUS corrurmnlct!ons will not be noticefl, but others will fce printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor. Times, Hammond. Ind.

Vi5fliisi

sing a som;. If you'll alng a aong n.i you no alona. In the face of the real or the fancied ron:. In nplte of the doubt If yon'II fltht It out. Ami Khn a heart that Is brave nml (tout If yon'II luuga at the jeer and r-fuse the tear You'll force the ever reluctant cheer That the world denies vrhen a coward crlei. To Rive to the man rv ho bravely tries. And you'll mIu nroran vt h n little i'HK If yon'II slug the rning as you gro along! If you'll King; a minn na you plod along, ou'll find that the busy, ruMblng Will catch the atrnln of 8 lad refrnlni That the sua will follow the blinding mint That the clouiln will fly from the black

ened any; That the atara tvII! come out by and by. And you'll mi ke new friends till hope descend

Front where the placid rnlnhow betid.

And all because of a little Hone

If you'll ulniv the sonsr you plod

slnn!

If you'll sing a sonic as you trudtce

along,

You'll see that the alnaytna; will make

you strong.

And the heavy load and the rugged

road.

And the fttina; and the stripe of torour-

ous goad

Will sour wilh the note that you act

n float i

That the beam will change to a trifling

mote;

That the world Is bad when you arc

nl

And bright am beautiful when clad;

That all you need la n little mihk

If you'll sins the Monte as you trudge

along;! Philadelphia Telegraph.

Taffs state yet he failed to win by

a popular majority.

433

Hammond Commandery, No. 41, K. T. Regular stated meeting first and

third Monday of each month. November IS, Pled Cross work.

Hammond Chapter, No. 117, R. A. M. Regular stated meeting second

and fourth Wednesday of each 'month Special meeting November 20. Mark Master.

Hammond Council, No. 90. R. S. M. Stated meetings first Tuesday of each

month. Charter will be delivered by

Grand Master Herbert Graham, Tuea day, Nov. 19.

Garfield Lodge. No. 5B9. F. & A. M

Stated meetings every Friday evening.

THINK OF IT.

An Indianapolis dispatch declares

that thousands of relic hunters

groveled about in the debris of the

ill-fated C. H. & D. train yesterday

and that one woman carried away as a treasured souvenir the little shoes of the dead Cheney baby And still

we speak of our country as civilized!

Fort Wayne News. We don't unless we're joking.

THR Clay Center Times advocating purity of language says, "If you

mean "yep" for yes say so, and don' grunt "uh-huh."

LINKS IN THE CHAIN.

Street cars from Gary to Indiana

Harbor over the new Gary and Interurban extension are promised before

the year ends. Every new street car line connect

ing two or more of our local communities is a short cut toward the time when the whole of Northern

Lake county will be incorporated in

to one metropolis, rivaling Indian-

apois.

For instance a class in geography

is studying the map of India. The

student reads about the character of

the country, its nrrnlncN. Its nennle:

the location Of th rnnn rv is fixed nn

samples of apple blossoms from the .lo , , , , . , . his mind and then the class is taken

muge roau district auu uavf iaKen 10 ji , . ... , 1 into a darkened rncim whprs the. he

ffillinir n n find itslrlno' whothr crin 1 In I

, ' turbaned crowd passes In review in going to be any cheaper. t. ot . 4. v.i. .

tuv, v.- 1. 1 v v l o v'a. VttlLUlld, UdlUCiO 1 Li

the sacred river Ganges splash in its

FUNNY post election facts, Wilson murkey waters, the character of' its

carried his own state. Roosevelt's 0Ules 13 shown, the typical architec

state, Deb's state, Chapin's state and ture of the country is pointed out and

In short the whole class visualizes

India. It supplements the dryer book

learning and makes the subject inter

est ing.

Then take a class in anthropology

It could be shown the villages and the

ancient civilization of the Aztecs by

pictures of ruined cities and villages;

the cliff dwellers of Arizona could be

seen in every school room and thus

the progress of the world from primi

tive times could be shown.

Even geology could be taught by

having animated pictures taken of

typical faults .exposed rock strata

canyons showing the effect of erosion

waterfalls, geysers and even minor

volcanic eruptions

nihRb, doesn't seem to be such In the field of botany Lyman

a great scurry for the Crown Point Howe has shown how a flower blooms

posioniee as was expected even ine nun unioids hefore ones very

though Postmaster Daugherty s com- eyes. There is no better way of mission doesn't expire for four years, teaching zoology than by moving pic

tures.

In fact the purely abstract sciences

WHERE'S QUEEN ANNE? are the only ones that could not be

Steamship Caledonia from Glasgow taught by the cinematograph. It is

has just brought over 5,000 cases of not carrying the idea too far to say Scotch. that In chemistry certain reactions

With flie heln of the "Bartender's could be shown by moving pictures to

... . . .

Guido" and Jimmv Clabby we are 8a" notning or demonstrating what

able to announce that this is enough 18 being done by commercial chemists

for 900.000 highballs. educators have been so slow

This will be about enough for the to take UP thls important line of edu

first, inter-t itv- match next snrir? v, canonaj work 13 Hard to understand

WE are offering no congratulations

to the city of Hammond on Mayor

Smalley'8 latest appointment. As

Hek. used to say, "We're hap."

tween the Hammond and the Michi

gan City golfers.

EGGS in New York are selling for

six cents apiece. Probably hens are

getting so that they feel it doesn't pay to lay them anymore.

A MAN yi Pellville, 11., lived on water for 30 days. The dispatches do not say whether it was a campaign bet or not.

BIG TIM'S BROWN SUIT. We read with pleasure the dispatch from Memphis telling what a furore Colonel Timothy Englehart, the Gary alderman and real estate man, created when he blossomed out in southern society in his famous brown-hued full

dress suit. It was only in June time

that Pig Tim cut a wide awath in

wan street wnen ne called upon Judge Gary in a dress suit of vivid

grey. If our neighbor ever swoops down upon the winter colony at Palm beach we fear that all precedents will

bo antiquated.

Golden brown, the color of Colonel

Kngleharfs togs, has a peculiar fas

cination to the southerner. Well do we remember the limpid descriptions of gokien-hued mountain dew the nectar of the gods, the life of crea

tion; joy, ecstasy, the smilos of beau

tiful women, sunshine, all in the pro

duct of the southern skies. In dazzling the southern colonels with golden-hued brown Colonel Englehart chose an appropriate color and whatever rules of saratorial correctness were broken they were, no doubt, replaced by a eense of delightfu satisfaction. In other words, we should call Colonel Englehart an authority on the psychology of colors.

ABUSING OUR WILLIAM. According to W. II. Bodgett the Indianapolis News staff man working at present on the Harry Moose case William A. Cain, a Gary contractor, who is mentioned in the Moose confession, laughed at the charges the former city clerk made against him. "If you vould stop and think a minute," said Mr. Cain, "you would se th unreasonableness of Mooso'b story. I was not Implicated in the bribery charges at Clary at all. No onp had made, any charges against me. It absolutely made, no difference to ma whether Moose went away or stayed in Gary. 1 had no Interest either directly or Indirectly In any testimony he might give. J would not be benefited in any manner, shape or form by anything that Mooso might Fay or do. That being the case, do you Imagine T am fool enough to push myself into the. penitentiary by giving Moose or any other witness bribe money. It's absurd. Th'! only thing that makes

me sore is tne thought that any one would imagine that I had so little; sense aa to do a thing like Moose jays I did."

1 ne tact or tne matter is, we sup

pose, that it is a downright shame to even think for a teeny-ween lest moment that William would ever be

guilty of doing such a thing. How could any on ? conceive that Wilhelm had any interest In the case one way or the other? Beyond chasing a few shirts up and down the rubbing board now and anon as he sings blithely, "Onward Christian Soldiers." the honorable Wilfred is supremely indifferent to Gary. "No one has ever made any charges against me "Will murmurs plaintively.

Well we should say not. Wilbert's

life in Gary is an open book it is pure and spotless it is a maiden's prayer as sweet as an Agean luteas fragrant as a Jacquimot rose after dewfall. Willie makes no more noise than the tinkling tlnnitinmbulatlon of the little bell that calls to vespers at eventide. Now give over, let Bill alone!

What Is visualized is never forgotten.

Anything that tends to popularize

education Is valuable.

Of course a great many of the plc-

ANY one who beleves that work- tures that are shown in the moving

ing on a newspaper is a- soft snap picture shows have an educational

snouid drop into a newspaper office value but there Is too little exnlana-

when the election returns are being tion of them. The pictures are seen

tabulated and b e disillusionized. solelv because thev art niftnr-

Poughkeepsie Star. Only worse time their value would be doubled if the

around a newspaper shop is when exhibit woro tn bp nroorfoH v,v on

there's no news coming in and you exposition of the subject and matters

can't dig any up. of interest were to be pointed out.

The difference between showing

pictures for the purnose of erettiner

FOR Thi, SAKE OF THE GOOD. the nickel and showing them for the

Oh, the stirring and rough and lm- purpose of educating a class of young

petuous song; students would be apparent once the

The song of the heart that dares, plan of producing educational films

That keeps to its creed and gives no was adopted.

heed . The moving picture has revolution-

To the faces that fortune wears. ized the show business. It promises to

That heart that laughs when the foe revolutionize educational methods. It

Is met. remains for some one with a real per

And thrives and fires at taunt and sonality to stand sponsor for the de-

threat, velopment of this feature of the bus?

And finds no toiling or traveling long. nesa.

For the sake of the good it bears. For Instance a Lake County school

could make a start by utilizing such

films as have real educational value

rea(1 the accounts of some of 1)ut sooner or ,at some orraniin

mese Muigar-iurk battles an un- RPnlus w, Indu thousands o

t;nnh i ? M r n t r d miin mirht tret it intn , ,

' " " scnooi d oar as to suoscrme tor a penes

his head that he was either attending of say 200 flm3 photographfHj at the

trust has $72,000,000 in its cash register. Chances are that if any $11 a week clerk asked for a raise to $12.50 he might get. 1t, as the $1.G0 difference would hardly be noticed. GARY yesterday dedicated a library and a settlement house. No sooner does Gary get something to make it good than It does something bad. " B A CH F. T jO It GOES CTIAZY MOI1E EASILY THAN MARRIKD MAN." Headline. Chances are that a bachelor worries so much about what would happen to him If ever he got married that he finally loses his mind thinking about it. "ROMANCE of Concrete" is among the latest books. .Suggest that they buy a volume up at Indiana Harbor and form the nucleus of a library. SCIENTIST predicts that all men will be bald hy 1965. What with safety razors and bald heads the poor barbers will have a hellova time trying to earn

enough to buy a soda cracker and a cup of tea. Jl'ST as we thought. Brother Woodrow Wilson announces that when he

gets in the first thing he'll do will he to call a special session of congress to tinker with the tariff.

NOTE the approaching Little-Chap

man wedding in Evanston. And a year

hence we suppose that we will be writ

ing about the same couple only it will be thusly: Little Chapman.

THINK of the sad plight of poor Mr.

Lorimer. They took the senatorship away from him and now the doctors

have taken his appendix. (Also some

fat fees.)

TER I1FE! Crown Point reporters

took one of those Infernal proofreaders

for an English lord. Hate to say what

they would take ours for if he ever visited the Hub.

SOME fastidious citizens in Gary

these days. Their ultra-aesthetic tastes

are marred so much by the clang of a fire bell that they have to go Into court about H.

NOTE that Mr. Taft raised his glass

when he proposed a toast to Mr. Wilson. So that none of our Lowell readers will not get thirsty we will say that Mr.

Taft drinks nothing but water.

GOVERNOR-ELECT RALSTON has ppointed an ex-ice man as his prlvat-i

secretary. This augurs some chilly re

ceptions.

Principals in $50,000 Broken Trotn Suit.

-rr

.'-.- -re- i T .

i rug sale or the linotype operator

and proof-reader had been several

hours at a chowder party.

very ends of the world, in Its wll

places, in its cities, in its labratories in its zological and botanical gardens

In its arctic and tropica! zones, in its

mines, its mountains It mlllo It

WTT TTT S XT ATI I ' '

uaft WA1 u ruiilflU ports, its shipyards and everywhere.

This is the way Harper's Weekly. And each of these films may be u?

the highest-toned democratic paper in ed a score of times In each cjty, ae

America, expresses it: "All honor and cording to the number of schools.

praise, gentlemen, to William How- is a busniess that would have

ard Taft, true to his country and to marvelous future and once adopted

his conscience, faithful in ail things, would never be abandoned

soon to become the first citizen of

America! '

THE Holy Land is losing its glamor and picturesqueness. A labor bureau has been opened at Jaffa and

no doubt the barkers outside are shouting, "Gary, Indiana, America

t!.7u piastres."

HEARD R UB E I

ST. Louis girls are yearing gold bracelets on their ankles to make the men stare. No need to wear anything on them around here to make the men stare.

M 'KIN LEY, Cleveland, Harrison and Roosevelt Instituted all together fil suits against trusts. Taft alone instituted 71. That's for your information Mr. Knocker.

LINK Steffens says that Becker is suffering from the sins of society. What t. h. is Link suffering from?

JUDGE is of the opinion that chil

dren are the saviors of squalid homes

and reform their parents. Yes and

in other homes. "Oh mama kiss papa.."

THE "MOVIES"; A NEW TEACHER,

Some city in Lake County has the opportunity to become known the

cc ft idea Of something to worry

about is the trreat squabble they are

having in Californy as to who reall

tarried the state. What difference does

world over as the first city whose u ,nake now 7

A NICE LITTLE CHANCE. Not wishing to seem at all officious but the cab'e announces that a spouse is being sought for the 1Ryear old Duchess of Luxembourg. She is said to be very charming and whisper, she has 50,000,000 to boot.

schools add the moving picture to the

corps of teachers that are already em

ployed. If we do not take the opportunity to lead in this line of educational work we will be compeled to trail. The time will come when a part of the equipment of every school room will be a screen and a place for a moving picture machine. Firms will be organized to supply the schools with films on educational subjects. Every school will be on one film circuit or another. The work of supplying films for the schools will become an important branch of a business that has already made half a

dozen millionaires and involves an investment of enormous proportions. It is strange that educators the country over have not long ago adopted the animatograph as an important auxiliary to educational work. They

do not hesitate, if the fancy strikes them, to change all of the rules of penmanship and make mlseral.de seravvleis out of every student In the schools but they are loath to try au

eart to Heart Talks. Dy EDWIN A. NYU

erses suita-

RKAD an account of the wedding of

Mr. Cable to Miss Tennis In Chicago. Also

they are both 30 love.

"GARY RKKoRM WAVE CON

TINUK.-f." Timks' headline. Yes. whenever there's any one caught stealing jam in Gary it's the devil ,ji monk he

would be, etc. A NEW book of autumn v

ble for a holiday sift will be rolled

off the Conkey presses next week. The work !s by Poet Ebert and is feelingly dedicated to Mayor Smalley of Hammond. THE poor boss natu'lly Jes got tired o' waitin": An old horse belonging to Henry I'ietsch died the 3rd of the month. It had been sick for a long time, and Mr. Piets, h had made arrangements to have it killed, to end its misery. The man who was to perform the execution failed to arrive, so the horse died of its ailment. Valparaiso VMette. WILLCM JENNINGS BRYAN suggests that lawyers who enable to guilty to escape should be imprisoned. At this rate about one-half of the bar would be behind the bars. WITHOVT doubt that broad smile you see on the face, of your I'ncle Elb Gary is due to the. fact that the steel

THE PRODIGAL'S RETURN. Thinly clad and hungry, the prodigal

emerged from the door of a box car.

The village was his own town.

whence without warning he had gone away a year previous. The wanderlust

had overcome him. Headstrong, impetuous, obsessed, with the desire to see strange sights, be ran away from home.

In the far country where he had gone

he began to be lo great want.

Sometimes he worked as a waiter in

a cheap restaurant; sometimes he spent

his nights In the pool rooms. lie earn

ed but little money and spent it.

Finally he came to himself. He had gone to the verge of rags

bondage. His appearance was against

him. He looked and felt like a tramp.

Lonesome, miserable, homesick, be

said, "I will arise and go to my moth

er's house." The truant's father was

dead. It was an hour before the dawn.

The ground was thinly covered with

snow, which chilled his feet through the worn soles of his poor shoes. Shiv

ering:, he approached his mother's cot tage on the outskirts of the town. What would mother aay?

He bad written bnt once. Maybe

mother was dead! Anxiety almost over

came him. In a rush of emotion shame.

remorse and humiliation possessed him.

now forgetful he had been!

Tears filled his eyes as he noted the smoke from the kitchen flue. Doubt

less mother was there or she was dead He opeued the kitchen door, fearful, hoping, yet dreading what might be

And there was mother! Her arms were

outstretched to him. and she was smiling through her tears. "My boy!" There was no fntted calf or feastmjr,

yet the prodigal, sitting at the kitchen

table opposite mother, with the hot cakes and coffee, had the greatest ban

quet of his life. II er boy!

You will never get down so low that mother will not welcome you. Father

may disown you and spurn you from

the door, but mother never!

Remorseful because of his cruel forgetfulness. his wanderings over, the

rrodlgal had learned bis lesson

At mother's expense!

The Day in HISTORY

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"THIS 11.1TK IN HISTORY" November 10.

1(126- -St. Peter's. Rome, dedicated by

Pope Urban VIII.

170 Fire consumed nearly one-half of

Charleston. S. C.

1749 Sir William Keith, ast governor

of Pennsylvania under the Penn familv. died in London. Horn in

Scotland in 16S0.

17776 .British under Cornwallis cross

ed the Hudso nto attack Fort Lee

17S7 Christopher Gluck. celebrated

composer, died in Vienna Born in

the Upper 1'alatlnate, July 2. 1711

1S11 Gabriel Duval of Maryland ap pointed associate justice of the Su

preme Court of the United States.

S4T First daily mail between Chicag

and Milwaukee.

f:

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Julius Marx of Chicago is defendant in a J50.000 breach of promise suit In

the United States district court. Helene Ellensteln of OurmUadt, Germany, Is the plaintiff. She appealed to the federal court through her attorney. Bern

hardt Frank, according to the declaration, after Marx had gone back to Germany from his new American home and won her after a speedy courtship. Scores of letters containing ardent protestation of love said to have been written the g'.rl have been forwarded to her attorney. Marx, who Is connected with the leather firm of Elsendrath, Schwab & Co., admits he wrote the young

woman love letters, but denies he promised to marry her.

1852 Duke, of Wellington burled In St.

Paul's Cathedral.

1897 Sir Oliver Mowat appointed lieu

tenant-governor of Ontario.

1911 Gen. Bernardo Reyes arrested at

San Antonio on a charge of citing the Mexican rebellion. "THIS I. MY S5TH niRTIID4Yw Stanhope A. Forlw. Stanhope Alexander Forbes, one of

the most prominent of the younger school of British painters, was born In

Dublin, Nov. 1 . 1S57. the son of Wil

liam Forbes, manager of the Midland

Great Western Railway of Ireland. Mr. Forbes was educated at Dulwlch

Colege and afterward studied art In London and Paris. In 1S98 he was elected an Associate of the Royal

Academy. Among his well known

pictures are The Smithy, By Order of I

he terms a fbrht on the Undertakers' Trust, and has been advertising low rates. Pohlmyer knocked Green down after Green had cursed him, then Green hit Pohlmyer over the head with a buggy whip. Miss Eunice Green, daughter of the liveryman, Interferred and stopped the fight. OHIO AN FILLS FROM THUX. William Burns, 47 years old. of Cleveland, O., Is dying at St. Elizabeth Hospital at Lafayette as the result of falling from a car off a Yabash freight train, while he was sleeping. He was found lying unconscious in the yards at Lafayette with his skull crushed and suffering from internal injuries. He boarded the train at DanlUe, 111. S I KS FOR SHARK IN ESTATE. Emer Lee, grandson of the late Mrs. Mary Lee, of Shelbyville, filed suit to-

the Court. Forging the Anchor, The day contesting the will of Mrs. Lee.

Salvation Army. Christinas Eve, the Fish Sale, The Village Philharmonic, and The Lighthouse.

Congratulations to: Francis Cochrane, Canadian minister

of rlalways and canals, 60 years old to

day.

Henry Lee Higginson, Boston banker

and philanthropist, 7S years old today.

Sir Brooke Boothby, prominent In the

She left an estate valued at $7,000 to her four living children, and the grandson bringing the suit insists that he is entitled to one-fifth of the property, the share of his father would have had had he lived. FRENCH MCK HOLDS HILLY. Democrats of this (Orange) county hed a jolification Filday night at

French Lick. There was a torch light

British diplomatic service, oo ywwa j para(Je w-ith plenty of red fire and today. I ,,,!., onil 9 nnfi men in line Renrp-

John H. Moore. representative In. ,v' p. ,., - ti1(1i,a Pointer.

Congress of the Eighth Texas district.

50 years old today.

Up and Down in INDIANA

Miles Roland and others dresses'.

made ad-

BESCl'B VGF.D SlICIDF.. Joseph Henry Senefl. 64, a prominent farmer of Madison Township, near Washington, missed death by a few minutes when he attempter self-destruction by hanging. A son found Senefl dangling from the end of a rope in an upstairs room of his home. The son promptly cut the form down and doctors succeeded in reviving the man. SenelY ercentlv traded bis f ai m for a

farm in Kansas. A few weeks ago he disposed of his personal property at public auction and was preparing to move to Kansas. He is known to have been brooding over the transaction and It is believed by relatives that worrydrove him temporarily insane. WILL SI SI'KND PI HLICATION. E. T. Staley, secretary of the state Republican committee, in Friday's issue of his newspaper, the Tipton Advocate, announces that the paper will suspend publication the first of next month. He assigns as a reason for quitting that the newspaper business In Tipton, where there are three dally papers, is not a paying proposition. He also says he has felt the loss of the patronage of the members of the Progressive party in Tipton Count'. The Advocate has been the official oran of the Republican party in Tipton County for thirty-four years. FIOHT STOPPED BY CilHL. Henry Pohmyer, an undertaker, and Herbert Green, owner of a livery stable, at Richmond, cngaKcd in a fist fight today on a downtown street. The fight is said to have been the culmination of differences which have existed between the two men about livery coaches for

DAILY FASHION HINT.

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5310

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f-'J.Trr

H ' ,-!M'V-

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Girl's Pinafore Dress. Here is an attractive little frock, made in pinafore fashiuu, ard a design very simple to carry out. Tie tlress closes at the back and is becoming' pleated at each side of the centre front and centre back. The pretty collar is fashioned of contrasting material, of which the cuffs ani belt are also composed. Linen, pique, giczbam. perca'e or chambray may be used. The pattern, Xo. .",010, is cut in sires 4 to 10 years. Medium size will require 2 yards of 30 in"h mn'erial sod Vi yard of SO inch contrnstin? goods. The above pattern can b obtained by

funerals. Green has beta making what Bending 10 cents to the cOke of this paper.

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