Pike County Democrat, Volume 24, Number 34, Petersburg, Pike County, 5 January 1894 — Page 3

N THE OLD-FASHIONED GIKL. Then's an old-fashioned girl In an old-1 toned street. Dressed In old-fashioned clothes from, her head to her feet. And she spends all her time in the old-fashioned Of caring tor poor people's children all day. &And she knows not the styles of the spring or the fall Two hundred a year will suflee for her needs, And an old-fashioned Bible is all that she reads. And she has an old-fashioned heart that is true To a Icllow who died in an old coat of blue With its buttons all brass—who is waiting above Par the woman who loved him with old-fas h- . ioned love way She never has been to cctlllon or halt 1 —Tom Hall.'n Life

A (Copyright, 1893, by J. B. Uppincott & Co., sod published by special arrangement] j | III.fCONTIBtrED. • . It wa£ -“bonne maman,” explained madame, who had ordered the cab from town for them, never dreaming of the condition of the river road or suspecting that of the <lriver. “So much the happier for me,” laughed Waring. “Take the front seat Jeffers. Now Kin Nin, ma fleurette. up with you!” And the delighted fchild was lifted to her perch in the stylish trap she had so often admired. “Now, madame,” he continued, extending his hand. Hut madame hung back, hesitant and blushing. ' “Oh, M. Wareeng, I cannot, I must not. Is it not that some one shall extricate the cab?” “No one from this party, at least,” laughed Waring, mischievously,making the most of her idiomatic qpery. “Your driver is more cochon than cocher, and if he drowns in that mud ’twill only serve him right. Like your famous compatriot, he'll have a chance to say, ‘I willdrown.an dno one shall help me,’ for all I care. The brute! Ailons! I will drive you to bonne mamaas of whom it is the fete. Bless thaW>aby daughter! And Mme. d’Hervilflf shall bless Nin Nin’s tout devoue Sam.” And Mme. Lascelles found furtherremonstrance useless. She was lifted into the seat, by which time the driver, drunken and; truculent, had waded after them. “Who’s to pay for this?” was his surly question. “You, I fancy, as soon as your employer learns of your driving into that hole,” was Waring’s cool reply. - “Well, by Gcd, I want .five dollars for my fare and trouble, and I want it right off.” And, whip in hand, the burly, mud-covered fellow came lurching up the bank. Across the boggy street beyond the white picket fence the green blinds of a chamber window in an old-fashioned southern house were thrown open, and two feminine f-j faces peered forth, interested specta-, tors of the scene. “Here, my man!” said Waring, in low tone, “you have earned no five dollars, ■and you know it. Get your cab out, come to Mme. d’Hervilly’s, where you were called, and whatever is your due will be paid you; but no more of this swearing or threatening—not another ’ word of it.” 6 “I want my money, I say, and I mean •to have it. I’m not talking to you; I’m talking to the lady that hired me.” “But I have not the money. It is for my mother—Mme d’Hervilly—to pay. You will come there.” j ^ “I want it now, I say. I’ve got to i hire teams to get my cab out. I got stalled here ca:rrying you and your child, and I mean to have my pay Tight now, or I’ll know the reason why. Your swell friend’s got the money. It’s none of my business how you pay him.” \ But that ended the colloquy. Waring’s fist landed with, resounding whack under the. cabman's jaw, and sent him rolling down into the mud below. He was up, floundering and furious, in less than a minute, cursing horribly and groping in the pocket of his overcoat. “It’s a pistol, lieutenant. Look out!” cried Jeffers. There was a flash, a sharp report, a stifled cry from the cab, a scream of terror from the child. But Waring had leaped lightly aside, and before "the half-dronken brute could cock his weapon for a second shot he was feUed like a dog, and the pistol wrested from his hand anci hurled across the levee. j Another blow crashed full in his face as he strove to find his feet, and this time his muddled senses warned him it were best to lie # Two minutes more, when hr mfi.ed his battered head and strove t ar ch the blood streaming from hk • arils, he saw the team driving blw . f^pvay up the crest of the levee; ana' overcome by maudlin contemplation of his foeman’s triumph and his own wretched plight, the cabman sat him down and wept aloud. * 1

And to ms sttcoor presently tnere •came ministering angels from across * the muddy way, one with a brogue, the other in a bandanna, and between the two he was escorted across a dry path to the magnolia-fringed inclosure,' •comforted with soothing applications without and within, and encouraged to tell his tale of woe. That he should wind^t up with vehement expression of his ability to thrash a thousand swells like the one who had abused him and a piratical prophecy that he’d -drink his heart’s blood within the week was due not so much to confidence in his own powers, perhaps, as to the strength of the whisky with which he had been liberally supplied. Then the lady of the house addressed her Ethiop maid of all work: “Go you over to Anatole’s now, ’Louette. Tell him if any of the byes are there I want ’urn. If Dawson is there, Jjrom the adjutant’s ollice, I wahnt him rpni$k. Tell him it’s Mrs. Doyle, and never mind if he's been dhrinkm’; he -shall have another dhrop here.0 And at her beck thee* presently ay- \

peared three or Itnu besotted-looking specimens in the coarse undress uniform of the day, poor devils absent without leave from their post below and hoping only to be able to beg or steal whisky enough to stupefy them before the patrol should come and 'drag them away to the guardhouse. Promise of liberal reward in shape of liquor was sufficient to induce three of their number to go out with the fuming cabman and help rescue his wretched brute and trap. The moment they were outside the gate she turned on the fouith, a pallid, sickly man, whose features were delicate, whose -hands were white and slender/ and whose whole appearance, despite glassy eyes and tremulbus month and limbs, told the pathetic story of better days. “You’re off ag’in, are you? Sure I heerd so, and you’re mad for a dhrink now. Can ye write, Dawson, or must I unsteady brace you up first?’’ An imploring look, an gesture, alone answered. “Here, thinL wait! It’s absinthe ye need, my buck. Go you into that room now and wash yourself, and I’ll bring it and whin the others come back for their whisky I’ll tell ’um you’ve gone. You're to do what I say, nojv, and Doyle will sge yon Plough; if not, it’s back to that hell in the guardhouse you’ll go, my ; word on it.” “Oh, for Gbd’s sake, Mrs. Doyle--** began the poor wretch* imploringly, but the woman shut him off. “In there wid you! the others are coming.” And, unbarring the front door, she presently admitted the trio returning to claim the fruits of their honest labor. “Is he gone? Did he tell you'what happened?” “lie’s gone, yes,” answered one; “he’s gone to get square with the lieutenant and his cockney dog-robber. He says they both jumped on him and kicked his face in w ien he was down and unarmed and helpless. Was he lyin?” “Oh, they bate him cruel. But did he tell you of the lady^-who it was they took from him?” “Why, sura, the wife of that old

tion jet, and wil be for an hoar. Lay tills with the col mel’^mailon his desk, and thin go yon o yonr own. C ome to me this aftheriKi >n for more dhrink if ye can tell me v hat he said and did when he read it. No! no more liquor now. That’ll br ice ye till dinner-time, and more would make ye dhrunk.” Miserably he p odded away down the levee, while she his ruler, throwing on a huge, dirty white sun-bonnet, followed presentl' in his 'tracks,.] and shadowed him until she saw him safely reach the portal > of the barracks after We or two frui less scouts into wayside bars in hop of finding1 some one to treat or trust him to a drink. Then, retracing'her st ps a few blocks, she rang sharply at he lattice gate opening into a cool .nd shaded inclosure, beyond which c* uld be seen the wldtepiUared verand; of a long, low, southera homestead. A grinning negro boy answered the sv mmons. “It’s yon, is t, Alphonse? Is your mistress at hom j?” “No; gone tc wn—ehez Mme. d’Hervilly.” “Mme. Devil! ;ase, is it? Very well; you skip to town wid that note and get it in your mast er’s hands before the cathedral clock strikes twelve, or ye’ll suffer. There’s a car in t’ree minutes.” And then, veil content with her morning’s wor c, the consort of the senior first lieu enant of Light Battery “X” (a dame whose credentials were too clouded to tdmit of her reception or recognition within the limi ts of a regular garriso 1, where, indeed, to do him justice, Mr Doyle never wished to see her, or, for that matter, anywhere else) betook herself to the mag-nolia-shaded cottage where she dwelt beyond the pale of military interference, and some hours later sent ’Louette to say to Doyle she wanted him, and Doyle obeyed. In his relief at finding the colonel had probably forgotten the peccadillo for which he expected punishment, in j blissful possession of Mr. Wiring's sitting-room aid supplies now that Waring was absent, the big Irishman was preparing to spend the time in drinking his ju nior’s health and whisky

waking’s fist landed under the cabm an’s jaw.

Frenchman, Ljascelles, that lives below, —her the lieutenant’s been sparkin’ this three months.” “The very wan, mind ye!” replied the lady of the house, with significant emphasis and. glance from her, bleary eyes; “the verb1 wan,” she finished, with' slow nodding accompaniment of the frowzy head. “And that’s the kind of gintlemcn that undertakes to hold up their heads over soldiers like Doyle. Here, boys, drink now, but be off ag’vnst his conning. He'll be here any minute. Take: this to comfort ye, but kape still about this till ye sec me agin—or Doi*le. Now run.” And with scant ceremony the dreary party was hustled oiit through a paved courtyard to a gateway opening on a side street. Houses were few and scattering so far below thje heart of the city. The narrow strip oi land between the great river and the iswamp was cut up into walled inclosures, as a rule—abandoned warehouses and cotton presses, moss-grown one-storied frame structures, standing \n the midst of desolate fields and decrepit fences. Only among the peaceful shades of the Ursuline convent and the warlike flanking towers at the barrjacks was there aught that speke of anything bufTdemoralization and decay, j Back from the levee a block or two the double lines of strapiron stretched over a wooden causeway between parallel wet ditches gave evidence of som^ kind of a railway, on which, at rare intervals, jogged a sleepy mule with a sleepier driver and a musty old rattletrap of a car—a car butting up against the animal’s lazy hocks and rousing him occasionally to ringing and retaliatory kicks. Around the barracks the buildings were closer, mainly in the way of saloons; then came a mile-long northward stretch of track, with wet fields on either side, fringed along the river by solid structures and walled inclosures that told of days more prosperous than those which so closely followed the war. It was to one of these graceless drinkingshops and into the hands of a rascally “dago” known as Anatole that Mrs. Doyle commended her trio of. allies, and being rid of them she turned back to her prisoner, their erstwhile companion. Absinthe wrought its work on his meek and pliant spirit, and the shaking hand was nerved to do the woman’s work. At her dictation, with such corrections as his better education suggested, two letters were draughted, and with these in her hand she went aloft. In fifteen minutes she returned, placed one of these letters in an envelope already addressed to M. Armand Lascelles, No. — Rue Royale, the other she handed to Datyson. It was addressed in neat and delicate feminine hand to Col. Braxton, Jackson Barracks. I . ' “Now, Dawson, ye can’t see her this day, and she don’t want ye till you can come over here sober. Off wid ye now to barracks. Thoy re all out at inspeo

and disconrsir g upon the enormity oi his miscondue i with all comers, when Ananias entered and informed him there was a l:*dy below who wished to see him—“la ly” being the euphemism of the lately enfranchised for the females of the ir race. It was ’jLouette •with the mandate from her mistress, a mandate he dared not disregard. “Say I’ll be along in a minute,” was his reply, but; he sighed and swore heavily, as he slowly reascended the stair. “Give me another dhrinlc, smut,” he ordered Ananias, disregarding Ferry’s suggestion: “Better drink no more till a fter dark.” Then, swallowing his potion, he went lurching down the stei>s without another word. Ferry and Pierce stepped to the gallery and gazed silently after him as he veered aroum to the gate leading to the old war hospital inclosure where the battery vas quartered. Already his walk was perceptibly unsteady. “Keeps his head pretty well, even after his legs are gone,” said Ferry. “Knows too much to go by the sallyport. He’s Br eaking out through the back gate.” j “Why, wha , does he go out there for, uAen he has he run of Waring’s sideboard?” “Oh, didn’t you hear? She sent for him.” “That’s it, is it? Sometimes I wonder which one of those two will kill the other.” “Oh, he wo ildn’t dare. That fellow is an abject c award in the dark. He' believes in ghosts, spooks, banshees and wraiths—everything uncanny— and she’d haunt him if he laid his hands on her. There’s only one thing that, he’d br more afraid of than Bridget Doyle living, and that would be Bridget Doyle dead.” “Why can’ :> he get rid of her? What hold has she on him? This thing’s an infernal scaodal as it stands. She’s only been hire a mouth or; so, and everybody ir garrison knows all about her, and these doughboys don’t make any bones about chaffing us on our lady friends. * j , “Well, everybody supposed, he had got rid of her years ago. He shook her when he wa: made first sergeant, just before the u ar. Why, I’ve heard some of the old stagers say there wasn’t & finer looking soldier in all the regiment than Jim Doyle when he married that specimen at Brownsville. Doyle, too, suppose d sh^geas dead until after he got his c< mmission, then she reappeared and aid claim to him. It would have been a at easy enough matter five yetars ago to prove she had forfeited all rights, out now he can t. Then she’s got some confounded hold on him, I don’t know what, but it’s killing the poo beggar. Good thing for the regimes t, though; so let it go.” “Oh, I d on’t bare a rap how soon we’re rid of him or her—the sooner the better; onb 1 hate to hear these fellows laugh i og and sneering alxmt Mia.

Doyle.” And here the youig fdloifw hesitated. “Ferry, you know |’au fond of Sam Waring as any of yon I liked him better than any men hi hit class when wo wore the gray. TTien they were yearlings we werfe plobes, and devilled and tormented by 1 hem most unmercifully day And night. I took to him then for his kindly, jolly ways. Nd one ever knew hi m to say or do a cross or brutal thing, I 1 ked him more every year, and cussed him when ho was graduate i rejo iced when he got his transfer tci* us. It’s because 1 like him so much t hat 1 {tats to hear these fellows making theii little flings now.” “What flings?” said Ferry, “Well, yon know as much, as I da You’ve heard as much, too, 1 haver’t a doubt.” 5 “Nobody’s said anything about S am Waring in my hearing that; reflected on him in any way worth spe aking of,” said Ferry, yet not very stonily. “Not on him !*> much, perhaps. as the world looks at this sort, of thi ag, but on her. She’s young-, pretty, married to a man years her senior, a snuffy, frowzy old Frenchma n. She’s alone with her , child and one or two servants from early morning till late evening, and with that weazened little monkey of a man the rest c I the time. The only society she sees is ihe one os two gossipy old women of loth sexes who live along the levee iere. The'only enjoyment she has is when she can get to her mother’s up in town, or run up to the opera when she can get Lascelles to take her. Tha ; old mummy cares nothing for music and less for the dance; she loves both, and so does Waring. Monsieur le Mari goes out into the foyer between the acts to smoke his cigarette and gossip with other relics like himself. Waring has never missed a night she happened to be there for the last six weeks. I admit he is there many a time when she is not, but after he’s had a few words with the ladies in the general’s box, what becomes of him? I don't know, because I’m: seldom there, but Dryden and Taggart and Jack Merton, of the infantry, can tell you. He is sitting by her in the D'Hervilly loge grillee and going over thelastact with her and rhapsodising about Verdi, Bellini, Mozart, or Gounod—Gounod especially and the garden scene from ‘Faust.’” [to :be coxTrsrED.]

FRANCO-PRUSSIAFTWAR LOSSES. The French Dead Numbered 130,000 and the German Dead 40,000. . In discussing the German army bill Militaerische Wochenblatt contains a statement which is said to have never been published so fully before relative to losses in the Franco-Prussian war; According to this paper there fell on the battlefield or died of their wounds on the German side ■ 1,8S1 officers and 26,307 men; the number of wounded was 4,239 officers and 84,804 men; of the missing, 127 officers and 12,257 men. aggregatinga total loss of 6,247 officers and 123,453 men. ' Among the missing those still miss* ing or as to whose fate no certain information has been obtained up to the year 1892 must be counted among the dead. These, numbering about 4,GOO, and the 17,105 who perished from diaease, bring the total up to 49,000 Germans who died for their country during this memorable war. i On the other side it is estimated that the French'lost. 2,900 officers and 136,000 men by death, of whom 17,633 died in German hospitals. There fell of infantry, at its average strength, 4.47 per Sent.; of cavalry, 1.40 per cent.; of artillery, 1.28 per cent., and of the pioneers, 37 per cent. As to the separate contingents the Hessians paid dearest with their blood for the restoration of the unity of the German empire, losing 5.97 per cent.; the Bavarians5.58 percent.; the Saxonians 5.40 per cent.; the Prussians 4.85 per cent.; the Badeners 3.76, and the Wurtembergers 3.5l. A- very large number of- German soldier^ had to be placed upon the invalid list after the war, numbering 69,895 subalterns and men who were in active service in 1870-71. This is 6.28 per cent, of all the German soldiers who went into the field. The penfsion appropriation of the German empire amounts to about 500,000,000 marks, or 5119,000,000, out of which the wounded and dependent survivors of the late war receive their pensions.

MESSAGES TO THE DEAD. How Departed Friends Are Honored In Slam. A beautiful custom of th% people of Siam is one by wliich they do honor to their dead. At full moon in October, and again in November, three evenings are devoted to setting lighted candles afloat on the border of the sea, in the belief that they will be borne away to those who have passed out of this life. „. ■ ; * i The humblest style, says the Saturday Review, in which the ceremony can be performed is yet pretty enough. The broad, strong leaf of a plantain is bent or folded into the shape of a boat or raft. In the middle of this simple structure a tiny taper is tLxed uprigh t. The “katong,” or raft, of which this is the simplest form, is then kept ready in the house until the auspicious moment—predicted by the family priest— has arrived. Then at this moment, when the water is silvered over by the beams of the broad, rising moon, the taper is lighted and the tiny raft is launched upon the waves. p. Very slowly at first it makes its way along the edge of the ebbing tide; then, wafted gently by the still evening aiiy into the swifter current, it drifts ft»; ther away, until only a bright speck vl light distinguishes it from the rippling surface all around. When the night is fine thousands of these little stars of tight may be seen twinkling on the broad bosom of the Menam, all wending their silent way toward the boundless sea, all bearing silent messages to departed friend* who have already gone to the great H&kuown land.—Comxannvuv

r ritOmilOKAL CABIN. I J. T, KIMB. 1C. Ew Physician and Surgeon, rirmisBCBG, ixa j CTOffice In Bank buildlnsr. first: flow. Will be found at oflke day or night. GEO. B. ASHBY, ATTORNEY AT LAW PETERSBURG, IND. Prompt Attention Given to all Engines* crOfflee over Barrett A Son's store. Francis B. Poskt. Dewitt Q. Cbapfeu. POSEY A CHAPPELL, Attorneys at Law, ‘ Petersburg, Ixd. Will practice In all the courts. Special at* tention given to all business. A Notary Public constantly in the ofllce. A®"Ofllee—■ On first floor Bank Building. - E. a. Ely. 8. G. Davenport ELY & DAVENPORT, LAWYERS, Petersburg, Ini>. *2-©fBce over J. R. Adams A Son’s dru, Mow. Prompt attention giv**u to allbuainess. K. I*. Richardson. A. H. Taylor RICHARDSON & TAYLOR, Attorneys at Law, Petersburg, Ind. Prompt attention given to all business. A Notary Public constantly in tho ofllce. Offlcs in Carpenter Building, Eighth and Main. DENTISTRY. W. If. STONECIPHER,

Surgeon Dentist, PETERSBURG, IND. office In rooms 6 and 7 in Carpenter Build* in&. Operations first-class. All work warranted. Anaesthetic* used tor painless extraction of teeth. NELSON STONE, D. V. S., PETERSBURG, IND. Owing to long practice and the possession of a fine library and case of instruments, Mr. » Stone is well prepared to treat all Diseases of Horses and Cattle STJCGESSCP’l^Y. He also keeps on band a stock of Condition Powders and Liniment, which he sells at reasonable prices. Office Oki J. B. Young & Co.'s Sion. Machinist AN1> . < Blacksmith.

l am prepared to do the best of work, wltfc letislactlon guaranteed In all kinds of Black' smithing. Also loving and Reaping Machines Repaired m the best of workmanship 1 am* ploy none but Oret-elass workmen. Do no! go from home to get your work, but call 01 me at my shop on Main Street, Petersburg Indiana. CHAS. VEECK. TRUSTEES* NOTICES OF OFFICE DAT. NOTICE is hereby given that I will attend to the duties of the office of trustee of Clay township at home on EVERY MONDAY. All persons who have business with the office will tuke notice that I wilt attend to business on no other day. M. M. GO WEN. Trustee. NOTICE is hereby given to all parties Interested that I will attend at iny office In Stendal, EVERY STAURDAY, To transact business connected with the Office of trustee of Lockhart township. All persons having business with said office will please take notice. J. 8. BARRETT. Trustee. NOTICE is hereby given to all parties concerned that I will be at my residence. EVERY TUESDAY, To attend to business connected with the office of Trustee of Monroe township. GEORGE GRIM. Trustee. NOTICE is hereby given that I will be at my residence EVERY THURSDAY To attend to business connected with the office of Trustee of Logan township. gyPositively no business transacted except on office days. SILAS KIBE, Trustee. NOTICE is hereby given to ali parties concerned that ! will attend at my residence EVERY MONDAY To transact business connected with the office of Trustee of Madison township ay Positively no business, transacted except office days T JAMES RUMBLE. Trustee. --tNOTICE is hereby given to all persons interested that I will attend in my office 1» Velpen, %_ EVERY FRIDAY, To transact business connected w ith the office of Trustee of Marion township All persons having business with said offioe will please take notice. W. T. BROCK, Trustee. OTICK is hereby give* to all jwrsons concerned that I will attend at my offlee * EVERY DAI To transact business connected with th« of Trustee of Jefferson township. ft. W. HARRIS, Trustee N!

O- <Bz IML OB 0 & MISSISSIPPI RAILWAY. '•XTBOB 3PASS' 2UX2T38 EAST &_WEST. * Solid, Dolly Trains to Ctarlnuam. 4 Solid Dally Trains to St, Looia, t Solid Dally Trains to hoaUrlUe. Conectlng la Union Depots, with iMlJft of all llnesfor the East, W®s»t, North and South. ■< » Through Vestibule my Coaches, PtlbUh l irlor CarsaudSlieperaonall Train* DOUBLE DAILY LINE, ~«r~ ■ 'S * PilImauYestlbule Buffet Sleepers Urea SU Louis usd Stations on Main Line -to- . ' . • ■ flashiDgton,Baltimore,PhiladetI pba and New York, without charge,

, U- Eastward From WabhixotoX. Kit* J Accommodation Nil inyExpren Ni). 4. Night E xpre** No. ( Fast Express Westward Form Washikutox " 12 . 87 P, M, 4 18 P&t. 5257 A.M. 3.05. A. M. No. 7 Accommodation No. i Day Express . No. S Night Express No. 5 Fast Express 1248 P. M. 12 57 P. K 12 38 A.M. 2 06 A B* Home Seekers MovinG WesT She aid take this Une as tt has 1ms changes cares and better accommodations than s.iher routes. Our Vestibule cam are a luxury, which mas he enjoyed by all, eStUout extra charges, and 1 every attention is given our passengers to make their Journey pleasant and eomforta* - Lie. Our agents will take pleasure In answering inquiries in recant to rates for both passea» aers and freight, time, routes and conneo* tlons; call at your home if desired and at* •tend to shipping freight by the most direct routes and cheeektmg baggnge.witboutcharg* for any assistance they may be able to reO* d®N. B.—Passengers should purchase ticket* fjefore entering the cars, as the ticket rate r. «n cents less than the train rate. Communications addressed to the unde* ilgned will receve prompt attention, THOMAS DONAHUE, Ticket Agent O. A M. R’y Washington lad C. G. Jones, District Passenger Agt. ; - Vincennes Ind. J. F. BARNARD. W B, SHATT0C Pres, and M’gr. ‘ Ge’n. Pa*s A« CINC1NNATTI 0813©. F. A. SHANDY. PHOiopm. FAMILY 6D0UP AMO ME^t. . DEHCES A SPECIALTY. All kinds of out-door work, por» traits, copying and enlargingf rom r*ldj pictures ftc. Birthday and surprise party groups a specialty. Satisfaction guaranteed or no pay, Give me a call, or address F. A. SHANDY, Petersburg Indiana. 11 J. BEADY, Petersburg, Indiana, Will make yon Photos in any number at most reasonable rates. , 4, £W~Remerover that my work fa waiw ranted. If vox want PORTRAITS enlarged sail and Lave the work dona right. AH work ;guaranteed to stand the teat of ages and still be as bright as when taken from the gallery. > - . Studio equipments of standard modem makes. ' * V.;. y • Our motto—“The Best I* As Good As Any,and Always the Cheapest.” M. J. BRADY. § Gallery ia Eisert’s Building, upstairs, o» Main, between Sixth and Seventh. Monuments Best material, most reasonable prices, sake isfaction guaranteed at PeltmkargEMt hie Merits J. A B. YOUNG, Proprietor* THIS PAPER IS OX FUR IX CHICAGO AMD HEW YORK Ax the offices of A M. KELLOGG REWSP4K8 GO.

[i

ffSH BR^ TM»Tr*d« Muk Sa oa th* U* WATERPROOF COAT gggfif inth© World! ■*** A. J. TOWER. BOSTON, MASS. YOUNG MEN SSUttmASSSS nod iltuUODt. WAtoJ.D.8«OW’9,SMalte,aa» ■NUMOkHminvtHtnnttk