Ligonier Banner., Volume 45, Number 24, Ligonier, Noble County, 1 September 1910 — Page 4
WWW%W%%&%%%%WWfW% MW%N%%**'}%%%%-P%%WM%M*%MM% o ._ OF MYSELF Z Lk By Abraham Cowley - o : . > @__;____.__——-—-————.___———-————______.“___.________.——(.\ e ~A oy AT THOUGH the poetical works of Abraham Cowley :f. 3: !c( (burn in London in 1618, died 1667) “‘were more admired X \é ¥ than those of any other poet of his age” by his contem- 3 , : g _poraries, his reputation rapidly declined after his death. Z ’ n Ay He was educated at Oxford and espoused the royalist o 2 e "h cause. His efforts were unrewarded by Charles 11 after e & \? the restoration, and he retired to a farm in disgust. o SITTE et L 7 : ® . 7 : . : % HIS only grant me—that my means may lie : L . Too low for envy, for contempt too high. :; Some honor I would have, : % . Not from great deeds, but good dlone; ; :{ : The unknown are better than jll known— 5 .. Rumor can ope the grave. : ' Acquaintance’ I would bave, but when 't depends 4 R : Not on the number, but the choice of friends. .;’ 9 Books should, not business, entertain the light, s E’: And sleep, as undisturbed as death, the night. : E "My house a cotfage more - 3 o Than palace, and s! ould fitting be o _ ; I For all my use, no luxury. ; ; 3 £ My garden painted o'er = : With nature’s hand, not art’s, and pleasures yleld. — 3 : Horace might envy in his Sabine field.. Y :i : Thus would I double my life's fading space, - t For he that runs it well twice ruus his race; 1 i T And in this true delight, . : - > These unbought sports, this happy state, e :f I would not fear, nor wish my fate; ; v : : P But boldly say eech nig it, ¢ : Tomorrow let my sun his beams display, . :II Or in clouds hide them; I bave lived today. . : ’ ; * 1%*%%“'%“'%'%} Seafergest oo foste sfeofets festeatestetefeste e forteatede sfesfeofesfuofesteatesfedfedes
- 44 9 4 sanner Che Ligonier Lvanner. J. £. McDONALD, Editor ' | Puablished svery 'fhurmlay and antered {n thepustoffios, Ligonier, lnd.b, as second-clas matter - ; ‘PHONE NoO. 18 ; '+ -The Duty of Young Voters ' It must be apparent to the young voters of the country—and especially to those . who will cast their first vote this year—that the present republican party offers no suflicient inducement for th’eir support of its -candidates. Because of the misdeeds of its leaders—their disregard of the people’s rights and their unholy alliances with mercenary private interests—the republican party is so discredited and debased that it is doomed to a long period of retirement from control of the government. . In time-it may emerge from this retirement purified and with patriotic conceptions of duty. But that day must necessarily be long distant. In the meantime some other party willadminister the government and direct public affairs. It will not only need the help of the young men of the country but it will offer to the best and brightest of them exceptional opportunities for pt blic ugeiulness. Upon thoee now in their early majority the country must largely depend for aid in the great work of bringing the government back to its proper functions, This service must be performed through the democratic party. It cannot be performed through any other now in existence or in contemplation. : -&¥»® R B : i The effect of the protective tariff on lumber is to inerease arbitrarily the price of it at least a dollar and a half a ghousand feet. ~ Suppose ‘every dollar of this unearned profit which the buyers and users of lumber have to pay went into the pockets of the lumber growers of this congressional district, instead of to the lumber trust, hvw about the buyers and users of lumber in this district? What moral right have a few lumber producers in this district to compel every buyer and uger of lumber in the district to pay them a bonus of at least onhe dollar and & haif per thousand over and above the fair market price of the world?—Richmond News Leader. & B 2 * ¥ W, T The stock of the James B. Clow & Sons Company,of Chicago has just been increased from $500,000 to $1,500,000. This action was taken on account of increasing businessiand enlarged plant. The eulargeméut, however, has been 'made out of the proflts of the company while it still was paying a good dividend on the original investment. .Hereafter it will take three times as much mouey to pay the same rate of dividend, yet the stockholders have not put in an additionaldollar. Is it just for the patronizing public to pay prices that are based upen such increased capital? That is a live ‘aconomic question. . : . : ! : R EBERS The railroad and warehouse commission in the state of lilinois is after the big express companies, and has made out a schedule of charges which it asks the express companies to adopt so far as that state is concerned The reductions range from ten to fifty per cent, aud a big bastle is assured between the commissionand express companies. It is said this is tlie first time an efiort has been made to flx the rates of rran&rortation on express packages and the express companies will not yield to the wishes of -the ccmmiggion without bitter opposition through all the courts. The com. mission learned in its investigations that all the express cnmpm;ies are working in close alliance and that all of them have been immeunsely prosperous. In some cases thiey started with practically no capital at all and have grown rich and powerful. - The transportation charges were found by the commission to be discriminative, excessive and unreasonable. In as_ suming to fix rates to be charged for the service in the state of lilinnis, the commission has tagen a step forwatd.apd if they can do that legally in Iltinois they can do 1t legally inother states. The express companics realize this and will contest the right of the commission to fix rates of transportation, regardless of the justice of the demands of the commission. It will be up to the express companies to submit all the facts, thereby proving that their charges have been fair and equitable, or stand -couvieted of ‘excessive and unreasonable proflts and eventually be compelled to reduce the rates. The very fact that the companies have been able to pay large divic}euds on a large capital stock representing a comparatively ‘small money investment at the beginning will be one of the stumbling blocks to confront them when the hearing takes place.—Columbia City Post. * ¥ ¥ @ % % ; ‘The New York Evening Post, one of the most conservative and bbigh ‘class newspapers of the nation, a paper that takes a sane view of the political situation in speaking of some of Roosavelt’s recent demagogic utterrances, Bays: % . 7 : “The thing goes beyond a display of bad taste. Assuch itis shocking but it is, besides, an exhibition of moral imprudence. “I will make the corporations cowse to time,’”’ shouts Roosevelt to the mob. But did he not really mean that he would make them come down with the cash to elect him as he did before? : : : I *‘Does he think that everybody has forgotten the $50.000 taken from widows and orphans and added to Theodore Roosevelt’s political corruption fund? Did he not take a big check from the beef trust and glad to get it? And now he is going to make the corruptienists come to time!”’ “This champion of purity, this roarer for political virtue, is the man yvho was for years, when in public life,'_hsnd in glove with the worst political ccrruptionists of hisday; hetoadicd to Platt, he praised Quay, he paid court to Hanna; under him as president, Aldrich rose to the height of his .power, always on good terms with Roosevelt; it was Roosevelt who asked Harriman to come to the White House secretly, who took his money to buy votes secretly in New York and who afterward wrote to ‘* my dear Harriman”— yes, the same Harriman—reviling the capitalists to whom he had previously written: “You and I are practical men’’, “If Roosevelt is the greater cincher of crooks why did he net cinch them when he was shaking hands with them?’' . L e ke eaN Georgia Democrats do not take kindly to members of congress who play into the hands of the Cannon crowd. At the recent primaries they refused to re-nominate two old congressmen whe voted with the system, and refused to follow the caucus program laid down by the demoecratic leaders. There are a few more fellows of this kind that might be left at home, much to the advantage of the democratic party and the people at large. o : ‘ L It isregretable that certain religious organizations in various states, jncluding Indiana, have deemed it advisable to petition Mrs. Nichola® L ongworth to abandon the habit of cigarette smoking because of the evil example set to young ladies of America. The Republican applauds‘ their pluck and censures their stupidity, In the first instance, it is doubtful whether Mrs. Liongworth is the cigarette fiend she has been _denominned‘ by sensational newspaper reports; and were it true, it strikes the thinking mind that these moralists extend the evil thereof by a campaign of public« ity which acquaints girls with the vice of a public lady, of which they ‘were formerly ignorant. Itisashame and inmmgthmmebue on the theory that the more one kicks a skunk the worse he'll stink, it would have been better to allow Alice to smoke her fool head off in peace. — Rochester
| Will Determine Right. Asaresultof the annoyance caused o cottagers at Sylvan lake by the low vater during the present sumnmer, he Sylvan lake improveément com-| any has placed its affairs in the ands of an aftorney to determine he right of the G. R. & I. railway ompany to let the water out of the ake each fall. Former Mayor William J. Hosey s president of the association, which 8 composed largely of Fort Wayne eople, hundreds of whom spent their ummers there. The dispute is thereore of interest to many local people. The railway company has for a wuniber of yearg lowered the level of he lake considerably each fall to yrotect-its roadbed when the ice sete‘ n. There is some doubt as to whether | he company has the right to do this ywud even to drain the lake completely f it sees fit or if the cottagers have he rigcht to have the level of the water left as it naturally is. = Much of the claim of the company o its right to lower the lake 18 based yn the history of the lake. The lake was created years ago by the state as y part of a system of canals connecting the larger cities of Indiana. It was planned to connect the present lake with the old Wabash & Erie ranal here. Sylvan lake was to be the rerervoir for the system. With the advent of more modern meaus of transportation, however, the canals were abandoned and the lake turned over to Noble county withoutreserve. There are records of long leases niade by the county, granting power privileges to various con‘i"p&uies; but beyond this there are no clear records. The &. R. &I. claims that it has secured the privilege to lower the water ag much as may be necessary to protect its roadbed. The cottagers, however, claim that the road bed is strong enough to withstand the pressure of water and ice during the winter without lowering the water each fall. During the summer the lake failed to fill up owing to the long dry spell aud to the fact, as the cottages claim of the company lowering ‘the level below what was necessary. Asa result the water was too low all summer and was muddy the greater part of the time, the larger power boats could not operate, fishing was damaged and a rank growth of weeds was encouraged which endangered the lives of bathers. ' An irreparable damage has been done to the resort, the cottages claim, and they have started the present movement to determine their rights.—Fort Wayne News. . ~ Biddle, Pierson Reunion. The annual Biddle-Pierson reunion was held at the home of John Biddle Ligonier Ind. last Thursday August 25. A number of decendants of the family were in attendance from Michigan, Ohio, and Indiana. The forenoon was spent in greeting aud renewing acquaintence and forming new friendship, talking over old times and having a good time, ; At the noon hour the usual sumptious and appetizing dinner was gserved from the well filled baskets that had been brought by the different families. Each one had their appeties with them and the terrifle onslaugh on the food caused it to disapear. In the afterooon an interesting program was given: Song by John Pierson and Jim Biddle;song by John Pierson; song by Jim Biddle; song by John Pierson recitation by Jennie Mack; recitation by Dorthea Bourie; reading by Mre. John Ma'soney; recitation by Mrs. Carl Bourie; recitation, Mrs. Cora Sheparason; toast by Mrs. J. J, Biddle: recitation, Dorthea Bourie; talks were ginen by a nonmber of those present in which they expressed their appreciation of being 1n attendence. : ;
The business session followed and resulted in the election of Tommy Biddle as presidernt and H. H. Biddle secretary. It was decided to hold the next reunion the second Thursday in September at Rome City. Those present were John Biddle and family, Scott Swigard and family Kgeie Hite and family, Maggie Goudy Carl Bourie and family, Wes Bourie and family, Bruce Schutt of Ligonier Ben Golden, Mike Rice and family, Scotft Rice and family of Wawaka; Miunie Davis and family. Elkhart; Sam Lewallen and grandchild of Tipton Dave Lewallen of Syracuse; John and Frank Pierson of Hartford Mich., Tommy Biddle and wife of So. Haven Mich. Homer Hines and Lura Werker H. H. Biddle and family of Albion; John Biddle and family Mrs. Crissman and Payne of Ohio; Mr Roeder. .
A vote of thanks is tendered to Mr. and Mrs. Biddle for the hospitality and entertainment. Then we enjoyed some music by J. J. Biddle and Jess Biddle after which we prepared to depart for our homes all wishing to see one and all and many more at our nextrennion. ; LR
Will Fight the Ditch.
Clyde A. Walb of Lagrange will soon start work on dredging Fly Run al7 mile ditch in. Lagrange county and which passes through Lagrange. After they had been assessed $4,500 for the cost of construction, Lagrange ‘people fought the diteh, but did not succeed in the killing project. A Goshen lawyer has been retained to flght the ditch construction aud there has been some talk of an injunetion, but Contractor Walb is prepared to go ahead. Much objection is made to Walb using a yard and a half dredging machine and the Lagrange county commissioners have been asked to enjoin him. From all indications a hot fight is in prospect.— Goshen Demoerat. s
Internal Revenue Receipts 1 During the present year the iuter-i nal revenue receipts from spirits and | fermented, or malt lignors, amounted ; to more than $208.500.000. Thereven- ‘ ue from spirits alone was $148,000.000 whieh is an increase of more than| $13,000,000 over 1909 ; the remenue from malt liguors was $60,682.285 which was an incroase of more than $3,000 - 000 over the previous, According to the reports of Yhe revenue department it appears that in recent years the increase in the consumption of spirits and malt llquors has been l considerable and. steady from year to year. : | The revenue from spirits roge from 1 something more than $82,000.000 in | 1867 to $136,868,000 in 1908, and to §l4B. 000,000 during the last. fiscal year while the revenue from fermeunted liguors rose from $32,472,000 in 1897 to $57,459,000 in 1909, and to wpward of $60,000,000 during the past fTscal year. ~ The statisticians of the revenue department estimate that thé consumption for each member of the population in 1897 was 1.02 gallons of spirits and 14 94 gallons of malt ligunorg, which with the small amount of wine consumed, bought the total for each mémber of the body politics up to 16 50 gallons per year. In 1908 the per capita consumption of spirits wine and malt liquors rose to 21 85 gallons. ; | These figures are instructive because they show that the greatest wave of prohibition which has swept over the country in the last few years did not serve to reduce the internal revenue receipts or to diminisL the consumption of intoxicating beverages,; but on the oontrary, they‘ seem to establish the fact that therei,! has been no discouragement of thel drinking habit. Hence the scoffers may be inclined to scoff and jeer. Temperance is a moral question and must be inculcated like all oth-l er moral precepts, Drunkeness and the evils that flow from it are mat--ters of police regulation and must be dealt with as such. To try to solve the temperanee question by county option and state wide prohibition is entirely to miss the question. — The Evansville Courier. | How Needles Are Made. ' . Needles are made from steel wire is first cut out by shears from coils into the length of the needles to be made. After a bath of such bits as have been cut outthey are placed in a furnace. then rolled until perfectly straight. Next the needle pointer takes up a.'do‘zenv orso of the wires and rolls them between his thumb and finger, with their ‘ends on the tarning grindstone, flrst one and then the other being gronnd. The little steel bobbins are next fed iuto the machine which flattens and gatters the heads, after which the eyes are punched. - They are now complete needles, but rough and easily bent. Careful heating and sudden cocling gives them the necessary temper, and nothisg remaing but to give them their final polish. On a course cloth noedles are spread to the number of forty or fifty thousand. Emery dust is strewed over them, oil ig sprinkled on, and soft soap is daubed over the cloth, which rolled tightly,is thrown into a pot with others where it rolls about for twelve hours or more. 3 When taken from this friction bath the needles require only a rinsing in clean hot water, when they are ready to be sorted and packed.—Chicago Tribune.
Pays to Stop, Look, and Listen.
The highway approachesthe track through a deep cut which- prevents any view of approachiug trains until the rails are almost reached. - There are hundreds of railway grade crossings in Indiana which in general answer to this description of the grade crossing at Rochester Ind.. where an automobile. containing six persons was struck by a fast train, three being killed outright and three badl, hurt. The locomotive caught the automobile midway and cut it it two It would have been slower business to halt the car. to ascertain a cilear track, but it would have been quite a lot safer. During the past month in half a dozen accidents of this sorta score or more people have been killad In two such tragedies within a few miles of each other, Indiana has contributed five victims in afortnight. It pays to stop, look and listeu.—Fort Wayne Sentinel. : The Wiseacres. In our neighborhood lives a nervous, insignificant little man who is always talking of what he intends to do because the roosters of a neighbor crow at all hours of the night and disturb bim. He has been fussing about the roosters for years, and intimates that when he finally makes a move blood will flow in the gutters of North Atchinson. Still, the little man is no wmore ridiculous than the rulers of Germany and England, who have been talking for many years of war. They have spent millions on‘ the army and have almost forgotten the meaning of that the English and German people have almost forgotten the meaning of war, except wben‘ the boiler of an warship blowsup ora submarine sinks. We are all about] equally insignificant and foolish .— Atchison Globe. ‘ | Credit is Due Senator Gore. The investigation into the Oklahoma Indian land frauds has revealed & condition that will surprise the country and some of the eyidence| ealled out indicates that the :Wa.sh-i ington authorities had kroweldge of | what was going on. Senator Gore did right in forcing an investigation. —Logansport Pharos. S
Policy of The New Fish And Game Commissioner. = ' » Georga W. Miles, the new fish and ramne comimissioner appointed by Guvenlgr Marshall, has appointed an ; entirety new force of deputies and has made a radical change in the meghods formerly in’ vogue in the office, Proffessional or habitual violators of the laws, belonging to the class commounly known as “‘fish and game pirates,” will be shown no merey but a different policy is to be pursued toward persons who ttansgress withont real intention, though the bars will not be let down. Aeccording to an artiele in the Indianapolis News the general poliey of the new commissioner is indicated as follows: ; By the fish and game pirate Mr. Miles refers to the flah and gamne law violation and follows it systematically. This class of person, he beleives, is the class which is ipstrumantal in depleting the streams of fish apd the fields and woods of game birds. The real sportsman, he says, knows the law and has regard for it, beoause he recognizes its value, The farmer and the farmer boy, and the hunter of the village of small town, he says, as arule, are ignorant of the letter of the law and may transgress it, but will not willingly or knowingly. ) It i 8 the plan of the commissioner to deal leniently with the latter class of citizens. The deputy who discovers such infractions is instructed to enquire into the situatioa before making an arrest, and if itis found that the purpose of the admigtration can be served without a ‘trial in coart, the court must be avoided. Deputies operating nnder the new order of thiugs report that they are meeting with great suceess in the enforcement of the law and that law is being regarded much more highly thau formerly.”’ : : o Sugar Production and Consumption Including imports and homs production abont 7,5600,000,000 pounds of sugar were consumed in the United States in the year ending Jane 30, according to the bureau of statistics. The average per capita consummpition, eighty-two pounds, exceeded that of any preceding year. The production was 75,000,000 pounds, as compared 829,000,000 pounds in 1909, but 1,025,000,000 pounds of beet sugar were produced against 967,000,000, the highest record of any previous year. The Hawain Islands furnished 1, 111,000,000 pounds; Porto Rico , 556,000, 000 pounds; and the Phillippine Islands 176,000,000 pounds, in cach case more than for any preceding year. The imports from foreign countries aggregrated ' 3,918,000,000 pounds, a reduction of 188,000,060 pounds from the preceding year, Foreign countries supplied 51 percent of the sugar consumed as compared with 75 per centin 1900 and preceding years. According to the agricultural department, the quantity of beet sugar produced has increased from 73,000,000 pounds in 1899 to 1,025.000,000 pounds in 1910, an increase of 181,000,000 pounds of cane sugar in the same time. : Future Wheat Production -~ Mr. Carlton, of the statistical division of the department of agricultnre putting the present world production of wheat at over three billion bushel estimates thatin forty years it will have increased to over five and onehalf billion bushels. Statistics, we are told, can not lie, and if this be true it is apparent that the world is in no danger of starvation trom lack of tnis necossary. Kxtended acreage and modern methods of increasing the yield of each acre will be largely responsible for this increase, which will be greatest in Russia, Canada, -and Argentina. : Our population can not possibly grow in the same ratio. Why, then bewall the inaoility of our home production to meet consumption and at the same tims impose tariff laws to keep out the supply which might be easily obtaiuned elsewhere? — Financial Ametica. Another Back Number " Hon. Jack Gowdy, who made a fortune out of politics and wisely invested all his saviugs in Rush county farm lands, was interviewed by Louis Ludlow the ‘other week, and he buldly proelaimed, in defiance of Senator Beveridge’s attitude, that Le is a standpatter, and that he believes the Payne-Aldrich tariff law to be the best high tariff that the country bas ever had. In these insurgent times it requires a bold man to make such a declaration. It has only been a short time since Senator Beveridge telegraphed his Washington friends that he had kicked the stomach off the tariff law. Gowdy contends that the stomach is still there and working well.—Logansport Pb“-i o 8 : A
Let Them Sweep Before Their Own Doors
The members of the W, C. T. U. out west have sent a formal request to Mrs. Alice Longworth.. eldest :daugh ter of Theodore Roosevelt, asking her to desist from the cigarette habit. It might be well for these worthy ladies to see that they have ro beams in their own eyes before they assume to attract the trifling note of cigarette Bmoktng from the eye of an unoffending sister, or they might do a little good work in their own homes srying to keep their husbands and sons from iudulging in that nasty tobacco chewing habit, — Fraukfort Times. : Girl for Housekeeper WantedA gonod girl or housekeeper to go to Wabash Ind. where she will have steady employment. For further particulars enquire of Mrs. Lee Loeser.
Lighten Her Lab These Mid-summer Days Its hard enough doing housework these hot-weather days---if ~every condition is favorable. Butlt's a real affliction when the housewife goes at things in the old-fashioned way. 1f the men had to sweep there would be a quick banishment of brooms. A ~ Bissell's Byco-Bearing ‘*Prize’’ Carpet Sweeper is the ‘‘queen of gifts’ at any time—-but especially now. It will bring a new sanitary influence into the home. 1t will save the back-strain, the muscle-ache---the weary drudgery of brooming. Instead of scattering a cloud of germs, it goes deep, removes the impuritees, and takes care of them without spreading the dust or microbes. Cléaning day becomes a pleasure with a- ““Prize,”” .Just talk it over with the good wife and see what she says on the sweeping question. She’ll cast her vote for a “Prize”’--and. that’s the kind of woman’s rights we all believe in, Let us'show you the splendid line---pers-uasively priced. Lo : - ' “The Store of the Leading Lines” ; Phone 67 LIGONIER, IND. s ) L . T
—— VIORE ROOM == THAT 1s what | have needed for years in order to show my goods. With the space that the additional room on the south gives me, | have been able to so arrange my stocks and make such additions to my already large stock aa to supply all your wants in my hine- = ' e . |
South Room Men's and boy's clothing | shirts, underwear, hosiery, neckwear, col!ars, trunks and suit cases and The best line of " - SHOES in town
Special Discount omn all L@di@s Wool Suits, Jackets Jacob Sheets
: The Vance Reunion On Thursday Aug. 25. relatives and friends gathered at the home of Fremont Damey one mile north of Ligonier io the fourth annual reunion of the Vance family. Notwithstanding the cold rainy weather at noon there was found to be 89 present to partake of the good things that always appear on such an occasion. After dinnera few sougs and recitations were rendered. Following this was election of officers for 1911 which resulted in all tne cld officers being nnanimously re-elected. : It was decided to hold the next rennion at the home of James Vance and Thomas Bunger fiyve miles northwest of Ligonier, the i4th of Aug. 1911.
Those present frem a distance were ; James Smalley of Monte Vista Mrs. Iva Ulery and children, of South Bend, Burton Redman, A. P. Hostetter, Mrs. Marion Long, Mrs. Charles Loug and children, all of Elkhart. e
LAM EAYING 20C irCashtor - Strictly Fresh Eggs
1 Sack ¢iix Sugar X GIVEN AWAY SATURDAY, SEPT. 20th Jacob Baum
North Room: Dress goods, domestics, notions, hosiery, u'nd_erWear' ladies’ shoes, ladies’ ready-to-wear goods including, muslin underwear, wash and sk waists, Wooltex suits and l skirts, wash suits and" wash dresses. cLE
| , | | | _ 0000900090000 090009000000 . - Sat., SEPTS3, ’'lo L. ® D® e P : k Ligonier, Indi ~ Ligonier, Indiana : Farmers Road Race, for horses that E?\’e never been trained for speed on a track, trot or.pace, Purse §ro.oo. Class A Pace. all horses eligible to this race, Purse $50.00. Ladies Race, best two in three, Purse $20.00. Class D Trot, for horses that lave not won a half-mile heat faster than 1:15, Purse $20.00. - : : Class B Pace, for pacers that have never won a half-mile heat faster than 1:10. Purse $30.00. ' : No entry fee, but 10 percent. deduced from winners, except the Farmers Race.” All races besttwo in three. The Association reserves the right to postpone any or all races on account of weather or other ° unavoidable causes. Hopples barred in Farmers Race. m 6 FOLLOW THE CROWD! 6 e - i RRPT U T A R RS T TR SRR, R R R T TAR R T RYSN ST J. E. LUCKEY; Pres.. OTIS BAKER, SecyG. M. ZIMMERMAN, Treas. , z
|" - Upstairs fl The ~most complete - line of | Rugs, Carpets and | 7 Curtains in this city, all sizes ! 1 up to 12x15 feet‘fi
