Ligonier Banner., Volume 14, Number 12, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 July 1879 — Page 8
The Liganier Banner.
—The stars and sitripes were very sparingly unfurled in thig place on the Fourth. : o ; ' —Spell “pupils” backward, and you will discover the nature of many a one amoug ‘them. e , —An eastern man advises his disso- . lute son to “Go West and run down with the country.” ! . —Sol. Mier has bought of Leib Bros., ~ of Goshen, their 180-aere farm in York > township, Elkhart county, for $lO,OOO. —Read this issue of THE BANNER from first to last page, and then tell us whether or not it is a first-class paper. —Most of the raspberries that were brought to this market during the past week were rather of an inferior quality. v : ‘ ; —Some of those who, celebratéd the Fourth at Rome and Kendallyille required an additional day to complete the job. L _ ~ —James 11. Bolens.has received a fine assortment of artificial bouguets, elegant in design and perfect gems. of beauty. . .
**All persons knowing themselves indebted to us, will please call at the Empire Mills and make immediate settlement. S. M. BrRApEN & Co. ——OQur efficient Albion correspondent failed to connect this week. Thig will be a sore disappointment to our readears at and abou?he hub. - +The instruction given at the Musical Normal is so thorough that some of the students are expecting to attend the session at I’lymouth, Ohio, which begins July 28. - i —llt is reported that the wheat crop in Europe is almost a: total failure. Should this repert prove correct, our farmers may s?fily calculate upon fair prices for theix surplus wheat., ’ —lt was reported one day last week that a daughter of Joseph Swoker, on the Hawpatch, had both hands chop-' ped of by a reaper. The report, we are pleased to be able to state, proved wholly unfounded. P e GREEN BROS. BRICK YARD, 114 miles west ol Ligonier, on Henry Green’s farm. Any person desiring a good, smooth, darable, and hard-burn-ed brick will please give usa call. The brick are of good color. -11-3 t. 4 —dJohn Spackeen, of Perry’s Prairie, has purchased a McCormick Reaper and Self-Binder. The machine was put to a severe test, but fully came up to expectation, doing its work in a very satisfactory manner. - - —C. V. Inks and family spent the TFourth at™ Rome. Charley says the “Saratoga of the West” is certainly a delightful summer resort, and thinks it will gain in fame and favor from year to year. This was Charley’s first vigit to Fern Island. = - ‘~2_Dr. Carr, W. A. Brown, J. W. Hig--ginbotham, Judge Wood, R. D. Kermn, C. V. Inks, Peter Sisterhen, Jesse L. Dunning and a number of others witnessed the operation of the McCormick Reaper and Self-Binder on the Wood tarm near town Saturday afternoon. +#+J. 8. Ohlwine has on hand a newly selected stock of dry goods, notions, boots, shoes, hats, caps, &c., &c., which he sells extremely cheap for.cash. Also keeps a good line of groceries and pays the highest market price for produce. Call and see him, two doors north of John Weir’s. . !
**The Seventh-day Adventists wiil hold a basket and grove meeting at Wolf Lake, Saturday and Sunday, J uly 12and 13, 1879. A good turnout is expected. Come - with your well-filled baskets and enjoy this meeting. Elder 5. H. Lane is expected, also Elder Rogers from LaFayette. All are invited. —Father Simmons says our adyice, Jast week, to celebrate the Fourth by ‘reading the declaration of independence and resolying to vote the democratic ticket, was observed so far as the first suggestion is concerned, but not as to the second. That’s strange. A careful perusal of the declaration o® independence usually gives the reader a democratic leaning. - ~The following item appeared in the Lagrange Standard of June 26th: Mr. B. F. Pitman, of the Haw Patch, has, within a few weeks; lost 5 horses from - some unknown cause. A post mortem was made of the body of one of them on Monday last by a Veterinary Surgeon from Ligonier, in the presence of Drs. Short, Beecher and others, All the organs of the body except the brain were found in healthy. state. The cause of the slight disorder apparent in the brain is still a mystery, the doctors think, though, there must be some terrible poison generated in the stable where the horses were kept, as other horses of Mr. Ditman’s in the fislds, are not affected in the least. Mr. and Mrs. Ditman are both quite ill, but Dr. Short thinks it is the result of the ex--citement axg wWorry. - . —The vanity of most young ladies, quoth the Reynolds Herald, is due in a great measure to the vain silliness of ‘their maternal sire. The old lady, especially if she is of low parentage herself, feels her oats when her husband reaches that point which is recognized as well-to-do, and teaches her children to shun, despise, yea even loath those who are their equal, and very probably ~ their superior, in anything but pecuniary wealth. Let a poor girl, who has hitherto been dubbed “pot.wrestler,” “pan masher,” ‘-‘biascuit heayer,” “hash slinger,” etc., suddenly become possess--ed of a large fortune, and she is imme~diately rushed to the.top shelf of modern society; flattered and fawned by the young men. who but atweek ago called herézreasy cook,” inyited ;t;oca%l_ on the so-called best families, consider«ed “yery smart,” “confoundedly pretty,” and all that, yet she is the same idertical person she was before she became _an heiress. ’l‘hgdgiflswm used to pass _her by unndticed, now craye her socia--Iy, and think her mmpaafv. editying, ~And yet we have heard if intimated _that there exists a something called W but never had the good fortun ;;»v,ery many who belon g
#+ All white hats sold at cost, at the Ladies’ Bazaar. v —P. Ml Goodspeed and deputy Gates have been cléaning house this week. —A number of our Hebrew citizens rusticated at Rome City last Sunday. —A feeble attempt at fireworks was made jn this place on the evening of the Fourth, . | T #t At the informal weekly mattinees of the Musical Normal, the music has been exce ptionally fine, : ~ —Harvesting was somewhat interfered with, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday by heavy rains. —The base ball elub of this place won their game at Rome City on the I'ourth, the score being 26 to 4. - —Wher a man commences econoimiziag, the [last thing te cut off should be his h@me; paper. You can never prosper without it, e . —After five years of suspended ani‘mation {the business .of the world shows undoubted signs that the blood ; i 8 again circulating. ' A man who would wait until Sat-
urday evlenin’g to get his hair cut at a barber-shop ought to be assisted out of town with a stuffed club. ‘ —An exchange says alittle moistened brown sugar will cure a sty on the eye whei: placed “on the corner of the eyelid. '| The application should be made at [ night on retiring, before the sty has developed itself, otherwise it is no good. - : o —There will be a church fastival at Salem Chapel on the Hawpatch, Saturday Evel, July 19. 'They want a bell for -the mew church, and the proceeds will be lused for that purpose. Ice cream, efc., will be furnished, All are invited. | : ‘
—A nice little picnic was given to quite a numper of little folks at Geo. MclLeanls on the Fourth. The whole pariy was loaded on George’s dray and given a ride through Main and Cavin streets in the afternoon, causing considemblxmérriment\ : : - —Excelsior Lodge N 0.267,1.0. 0. F., elected Fhu following I.amed officers for the |current term: Noble Grand, J. W. Wolf; Vice Geand, Abe Hiers; Recording Secretary, Andrew Jackson; Permanent Secretary, Richard Sweetnam; TTeagurer, Henry R. Cornell. ++The| Musical Normal will give a popular concert Saturday, July 19, and a grand| classical concert on Tuesday evening,| July 22d, both at Union Hall. These concerts will differ widely in their programme, but will both afford to our citizens musical entertainment far superior to former efforts. ~ —The Baltimore & Ohio railroad will soon establish the headquarters of its lines at Cincinati, with John King, jr., Vice-President of the Baltimore&Ohio, and Regeiver of the Marietta & Cincinnati pnd Ohio & Mississippi roads, in charg&g The Company now controls: 10,000 ‘miles of road west of the Ohio river.
—The Hook & Ladder Company held its annual election on Monday evening, and elected the following = officers: Forem%, John Casey; Ist asgistant, A. A. Harter; 2ud assistant, John Biddle; Tr%asurer, C. C. Buchtel ; Secretary, J. W. Peters; sexton, H. Beard ; Trustees, W. H. Casey, J. L. Fordyce, W . Bourie; Axmen,J. E. Huffman, C. C. Buchlel. =~ s v - —Abram Bender, son of J. E. Bender of York township, was bitten in his lett foot by a rattle-snake last Sunday a week. lle was walking in the garden, barefooted, when the snake made a dash for him. The usual domestic remedies were applied,.and the patient, though sufering consifieral%}e pain for several days, was enabled 3o work in the ha,ri(rest field the. latterpart of the week. ° o i
—lnstances of mertality from swal-. lowing /cherry stones, as reported in some of our exchanges, should admonish thoge who are in the habit of gobbling down cherry stones, that it is a dangerous practice. The digestive organs o% human beings have by no. means the grit and hardness of a French| mill-burr and hence are not adapted to the grinding of cherrystones. . . _ ——The.Crawfordsville Journal truthfully remarks that no one was ever too good or/too smart to be a farmer. The blue sky, the balmy breezes and green fields never tainted any pure man’s morality, or dwarfed a noble man’s intellectual ability. = The main great work of home missionaries should be to keep the young men there and put the idle ones from the city by the side ‘of the industrievs country boy. ~ —While engaged in cradling wheat on his: farm near Diamond Lake, last Friday, John Simmons was bitten in’ ‘the foot by a rattlesnake. He happened to wear ashoe that had a hole at ‘the side, and the rattlesnake happened to strilfi(e just where the hole was, inflicting| a painful but not dangerous wound, owing to the fact that‘-a beny Jinstead of a fleshy spot of the foot was struck, Mr. Simmons at once rode to town and had the wourd cauterized by Dr. Carr. The snake was killed by s B, hyler. o o } —Avoid bathing within two hours after meals, is the advice of the-Royal Humane Society of England, or When exhausxied by fatigue or from any other cause, or when the body is cooling after perspiration, and avoid bathing altoget&er in the open air if, after being a short time in the water, there is ‘a sense of chilliness, with numbness of the hands and feet, but bathe when }the bodg is warm, provided no time is lost in getting into the water.. Avoid chilling the body by sitting or standing ’un%ressed on thebanks or in boats, ‘after having been in the water, or re‘maining too long. in the _w_?ter,» but leave the water immediately when ‘there ig the slightest feeling of chilliness. The vigorous and strong may ‘bathe early in the merning on an empty ‘stomach, but the young and those who are weak had better bathe two or three ‘hours after a meal; the heést time for such ia| from two to three hours after breakfast. Those who are subject to ‘attacks of giddiness or faintness, and ‘who suffer from palpitations and other sense of discomfort at the heart, should not bathe without first consulting their
#Mrs. D. Pixley, of Elkhart, will sing at the mattinee next Friday afternoon. o o : ~ —The great strike that was announeed to come off on the Fourth did not oceur, Good, ‘ ‘ - —The Noble County Medical Society will hold its next meeting in Ligonier on Tuesday, July 15. : e —Dr, Crum thas traded his residence in this place for a nice 40-acre farm one mile easbgof Middlebury. - » --Christian Ageley, a farmer living near Goshen, was ‘fatally injured by falling from an express train. ~ The Supreme Court has decided that a citizen of the State need not be a resident of the county to get a license to sell"liquors'pherein. ; ‘ —FEde Fisher’s acecount of the Fourth of July celebration at Rome, as published. in this week’s 7'imes, is decidedly rieh, rare and racy. * ; —The old Metropolitan Theater, at Indianapolis, is to be remodseled and rechristened. It is to be first-class and will be known as the Park Theater.
~ —Emma Johnson jumped from the second story. of a house of ill-fame, which was raided by the police in Ft. Wayne, and died of the injuries which she sustained. A : ~~A judicious use of disinfectants, such as copperas and carbolic acid,about cellars, sinks and such places, will save a . great deal of sickness and death, at this season of the year.. _ —John Simmons is not fond of whisky, but in order to neutralize the effects of a rattlesnake bite, he had no hesitancy in putting himself outside of a pint of the “ardent.” : . —The Lake Shore & Michigan Southern railroad company has placed four new mail cars on the road. They were mage at the Adrian car works and present'a handsome appearance. *#The Musical Normal has increased day by day ever since its opening. The attendance was nearly doubled and' the thorough instruction given is duly appreciated by the enthusiastic pupils.
—The residence of Cornelius A. Sullivan, on the Hawpateh, was burned to the ground on the night of the Fourth. Conflicting statements are made relative to the origin of the fire. No ingutanee. v : .
—The French minister of the Interior says that France gill have to pay $100,000,000 for foreign grain during | the current year. A good share of this hundred millions will go for American wheat and find its way to the West. —The advance in raw cotton has induced some merchants to lay in big stocks of cotton. goods. There are those who think that the advance is not permanent, and that prices will drop as soon as the jobbers get clear of their present stock. poat v —The storms which prevailed thro’out the west the latter part of last week and early part of this, have done much damage to the wheat crop. In nfany localities in Minnesota, Nebraska, ana Illinois it is badly lodged, and the rust has made its appearance. - ~ —County treasurers .who have re‘tained only 1 per cent.'of delinquent ita:xes since 1875, can, under the recent Supreme Court decigion, recover an additional 4 per cant. back to thatdafe. The eounty,of course, will be the one to refund, and rof the delinquents. - Lagrange Standard, - : —On Tuesday the price ot wheat advanced in New York from 2 to 4 cents per bushel. A contract for one million bushels was made in a single day last ‘week., The prospects now are that farmers will receive good prices for their: wheat. This is cheering news to the tillers of the soil.. ‘ ' —The red ribbon club held a meeting on the street Tuesday Eve., when Rev. Mc¢Kaig made a short address. The attendance was rather small. The next meeting will be held in Chapman’s grove, in thesouth part of town, on Sunday, July 20th at 3 o’clock p. M. All are invited to attend. -~
—Fourth:of July orators were not highly appreciated this year. At Michigan City scarce 200 hearers could be drawn to the speaker’s stand to listen to the admirable address of Lieut.-Gov. Gray, and at Fort Wayne the oratiors had to be dispensed with entirely, owing to the refusal of the crowd to come up to the speaker’s stand. , - ——A dispatch from Elkhart, dated Monday, the 7th, says: “J. M. Carter, of Angola, Ind,,'dropped dead while on a Lake Shore passenger train, to-day, going east. His death is supposed to have been caused by heart disease. He was one of Steuben county’s early settlers and a man of irreproachable ¢haracter.” o :
—On and after the first day of July the manner of collecting unpaid postage on letters will bé changed. Instead of stamping an envelope as “due three certs,” or “due six cents,” as the case may be, when insufficient postage has been paid, a “collecting postage stamp” indicating the amount d¢ue, will be affixed, and this stamp will have to be paid for when the letter is delivered. —The Dunkard Church forbids the marriage of a man toa divorced woman. George Hoover, of Hagerstown, Ind., ‘'was a Dunkard, yet he married a woman who had been divorced. The Church warned him beforehand, and expelled him afterward. The expulsion grieved him so much that he refused to eat, and starved himself to death, in spite of his wife’s entreaties. —Judge Davidson. of the Fountain Circuit Court, decides that the locomo: tive whistling law is unconstitutional. He bases his opinion upon the property rights of the people. The continued whistling is a great annoyance to the people living &L@%&he line of the railroad, the lives of the sick are endangered, travel upon the highways near the railway rendered dangerous, and the cultivation of farms adjacent 18 rendered hazardous, and this is destruetive not only of the comfortable enjoyment of life, but seriously affects the value of the property of the people living along the line of the railway, It has before been decided, the Lagrange Standard says, that the Legislature cannot authorize direct or consequential injury to property without compengation to the owner. o
-, TERSONAY., = Wm. S. Kiser was in town last Monday. e , Judge Lowry and family are rusticating at Petoskey. ‘ . W. G. Gardner’s family moved here from the east last week. L - The genial Julius Cahen, of New. York, arrived in town this morning. M. L. Fisher and family, of Ohio,are here on a visit to parents and friends. ~ Jeff. Johns has returned from Texas. He is not overly delighted with that country. e Mrs. Jarvis Peck has gone to Illinois in search of an improvement of her health. . - o Treasurer-eiect Keehn and ex-treas-urer Lash, both of Albion, were in town last Thursday. = - Dr. J. N. Smith, of Goshen, has been appointed assistant surgeon of the Insane Asylum at Indianapolis. Jake Souder, of the Diamond Lake neighvorhood, says he is going to move to Texas in course of a few months. Mrs. H. Billings and her son Rolland left for Washington City last Monday. They expect to make that city their future home. e ~Miss Jennie McClellan, daughter of Judge McClellan of Waterloo, graduated at the recent commencement of the ¥ort Wayne Conservatory of Musiec. - e e
Rev. A. E. Mahin officiated as chaplain of the F't. Wayne Fourth of July celebration. - Congressman Colerick and Judge Lowry were the orators of the day. ° ; ' v ~ Mr. Hallenbeck left South Bend last Saturday for Goshen. He began a series of temperance meetings in that city Sunday night, to be continued three weeks.
We see it stated that at the recent commencement or the Ohio Wesleyan College, at Delaware, Ohio, the degree of Master of Arts was conferred upon Congressman Baker of Goshen. - Jocob Kann, of, Kendallville, was in town Monday. He reports considerable excitement in our neighboring city, growing out of the prosecution of the saloon-keepers there for selling liquor on the Fourth. ; .
- —Sol. Mier is remodeling his residence. e —J. C. Zimmerman has put up an elegant iron fence in front of his residence. —The city of Goshen has about 400 dogs, of which less than 50 are listed for taxation. . . —The fee for liquor licenses has been reduced by the council of New Albany, from $lOO tosso. . = @ - —The wife of Mr. Wm. Slabaugh, of Sparta township, died on Tuesday morning. Funeral yesterday. —The bricklayers are now working on the second story of W. A. Jackson’s building north of Mier’s Bank. —Solly ‘Ackerman’s saloon has been enlarged, wall-papered, repainted, and re-arranged generally, in fine style. .. " —The general manager of the Wabash road hag issued an order to engineers requiring them to sound the locomotive whistle sharply twice at each crossing, instead of blowing continuously as required by the law. Ie will pay all fines for infractions of the law in compliance with thisorder. =
- —Geo. McMasters, son-in-law of eur townsman, Wm. Hart, had a narrow escape, on the 2nd inst., from. being killed by being caught in a belt of the planing machine at the shops of Walworth & Neville, at South Bend. One half of his pants were torn off and his arms and right hip were badly skinned and bruised. He escaped the horrible fate which he seemed doomed to meet by having the presence of mind to throw off the pulley belt which drove the machine. After making his escape he ran up-stairs and then fainted. =
—Elder S. H. Lane writes us as follows from Middletown, Henry county; Ind., under date-of July Ist: “Crops in this and adjoining counties are splendid. Wheat nearly all harvested. Theberry is very plump. Itisestimated that it will yield from twenty to forty bushels per acre. Corn is looking well, much of it is four feet high, and has a dark color. Oats are good, and will be much better than was expected a few weeks since. Potatoes bid tobe a heavy crop. Fruits will be scarce, but few apples, no peaches, but few pears. Grapes will be very plenty.”
Horsford’s Bread Preparation. The Best and Most Healthful Bread- Raising Known. Basily digestible and adds ten per cent to the nutritive value of the flour. ~ BAroN LiEBIG, the greatest chemist in the world, says: “I have through a great series of experiments, satisfied myself of the purity and excellence of your Bread Preparation. The bread has no acid, is easily digested, and of the best taste. Asgide from the convenienees this invaluable idea of yours has provided, I consider this inveution as one of the most useful gifts which science ‘has made to mankind! It is certain that the nutritive value of the flour waill be increased ten per cent. by your invention, and the result is precigsely the same as if the fertility of our wheat fields had been increased by that amount. What a wonderful resilt is this” : »
.- Johnston’s Sargaparilla is used by everybody. For sale by C. Eldred & Son, Ligonier, ' iA e : ‘ B Harvest Home Dance. ; ‘ !‘ . - 3 - HL‘L boo W Ringwald will .‘ )t give a grand harvest NS & home dance in his '\}X\g’;} ,/‘w L 1 : b 4 - =Y Tz large new barn, % . B—aß L ssmmiles south-west of Ligonier; on Saturday, July 10th. All are invited. Danecing to begin at two o'clock, .». Good musie will be had: Refreshments in abundance will be furmished, Do _, S - . ' Poultry men, attention! Oune box of Johnston’s “Sure Sgot” will kill ail the lice on gpmt chickens in 10 minutes. For sale by C, Eldred & Sun,
- How to Make Cologne Water. 1 i [From the Chemist.] L With no trouble at all, any one can! make in her own store room a better| article of cologne than thabt which i_s; usually bought, by thoroughly dissolv~‘| ing a fluid drachm of the oils of bergamot, orange, and rosemary, each with! half a drachm of neroli and a pint of! rectified spirits. As good as can be made out of cologne itself, however, is! also prepared simply by mixing with| one pint of rectified spirits two!fluid drachms each of the oils of bergamot,‘ and lemon, one of the oil of orange, and. haif as much of that of rosemary, to-1 gether with three-quartersof adrachm of neroli and four drops each of the essences of ambergris and musk. 1 It this 1s subsequently distilled it makes what may be called a perfect cologne, but 'it becomes exceedingly fine by being kept tightly stopped for two or three months to ripen and mellow before use. . : ! |
. e With one of thoe Best Seiec‘tedi_Sfléc”ks Qf_' . : . GROCERIES! - Coffees, Sugars, Teas and Tish of all Kinds. WHITE FISH, PICKEREL, MACKEREL, &c.ABOTTOM PRICES. . PORK, BACON AND HAMS ! QUEENSWARE, GLASSWARE O AND TARTE UL RS is complete, and will be sold at prié_es to suit e\’(eryb'od)j., | o L | I would A;ixilvitc th;:’_utttbc—:v—t_io’n 61’ a;pll Vclésk(v: :lr_)Llriy’ers,“‘;tfr.xd those who wish good g'oods%. : - , L o Laohier lnd Mas e J . DECKER.“
. ‘“Thef New Vertical Fee d ’ l Sewing Machine.
» Thg"iig}htest R‘unning,' ' Least Complicated Shuttle ‘Machine Made.
‘The Vertical Feed, as now perfected and applied to “The New Davis Sewing Machine,” is admitted by the best living experts to be the greatest advance in sewing mechanism since the invention of Sewing. Machines. “The Davis” does every variety of sewing possible with the old underfeed' machines, and in addition it accomplishes an “immense range of beautiful work utterly impossible for any other Machine to duplicate,” which is convincing proof of the superiority over all competitors. ‘The simplicity, ease of management and effectual manner in which the “Vertical Feed” overcomes the “many faultS’ax_@ ,'de,fetJts"’.:df‘ all underfeed machines is surprising. _ g Any one needing a 'Séwing Machine will regret havi_fi}g b‘c)fight any other after seeing the “New Davis.,” =~ - L e Machines in operation and for sale at F. Beazel’s Harness Shop. Call and examine them: Forsaleby .. ... = L%‘}gglfe? 4B 1 ' PIERRE MEAGHER-
J. W. HIGGINBOTH A M, S WATCHMAKER A\.// P i . _ o ! = L ,/;;“ X // : ‘“ . NGt e o s e 4§ 7 i [\g : ; e g / » e PR (B X m Jewelel 1A SR P "¢ g&\%fi AR . 3 / @ P "&" g ; L :"i‘.’ T\\.r(:?t‘\\‘(" J; 3 .‘ { v B=\ ig: “\\ -\ ' 'é—\ 3 - §§§;";’: i) ] / 7 1 e , RN L gO P TICIAN, RN e T U . —AND DEALER IN— oo WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILVER-WARE. " SPECTACLES © | Musical Instruments.and Strings, &c. . OrpErs for selections solicited. - [Fit_md to all kinds of} . Watches, Clocks and Jewelry promptly and neatly repaired and warranted, l 81-ghtr;)l;}é;scliggtmc Corner Third gnd Cavin Streets, Ligonier, Indiana. - 5 [3s_.__.__l’_.7l)____._'
= i : 5 : 2 | ATTENTION: '*W 1 _a.m Seliingr. th;—CLelgllorated,:: - _‘ , Pelton 24 Shingles e -Agé,izi this S;easoh;f “i‘ 5 Get my Prices before you purchase., : i Jo v e et L e _-Dealer in Hardware, Stoves, &c. LIGONIER, IND, Fehruary 12, 1870488 i 48l s i
Might be Tried Elsewhere. Agcording to the: Chicago T'ribune this is the way in which souls aresavéed in that city: “A few young girls lbelo'ng’ing to a west-side church have * set about a noble missionary work to: increase the attendance on their Leloved pastor’s ministrations. They go: ‘out just before the evening service ‘hour and lu¥e young men to follow: ‘them, pilot their victims in by a harm-“less-ilooking side-door, and give them in custody of two venerable deacons as sinners desirous of turning from the error of their ways, and before those young men have recovered from their shock of surprise and disappointment they find themselves stowed away in front seats between trustworthy members, and being prayed and preached at by the officiating clergyman in a manner which for directness discounts that of Nathan’s.”” -
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. Takes the Lead INTRODUCED
