Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 3, Number 27, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 January 1873 — Page 4
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Business Men*
LOOK HERE!
THE
Saturday EveningMail
AS AN
ADVERTISING MEDIUM.
*•*.- Has these Advantages:
I. Ills a Weekly Newspaper only, therefore it Is read the more carefully and folly. II. It 18 published on Saturday Evening, and read on Sunday when husband and wife are together to plan the purchases of the coming week. III. The most important fact is that it has vastly larger circulation than any paper in this city—larger than all three of the
Daily papers combined. IV. It goes into nearly every household in •j this city, and is distributed by Newsboy* in the surrounding towns. V. Although only a weekly paper, it usual ly remains about the house the entire week, and is not thrown carelessly aside after the first reading.
Vt.
.to
The rates of advertising are so reasonable that advertisers by using the col nmns of THE MAIL can get more for their money than through any other source.
For Sale.
T2K)R SALE-A FINE DWELLING HOUSE I and lot, east, on Ohio street. For further particulars enquire of Hendrlch 4 Willlams,offloe over Prairie City Bank, next door to Portofflce.
Wanted.
Ac Ann PER DAY! AGENTS $0 10 wanted! All classes of worklDg people, of either sex. young or old, make more money at work for us their spare momenta,, or all the time, than at anything else. Particulars free. Address G.8TINSON CO., Portland, Maine. s7-ly
IS60LUTI0N.
The partnership heretofore existing between the undersigned has been this day dissolved by mutual consent. Wm. R. Mercer will oontinue the business and settle all debts due dy and to the oldflnn.
JpOR THE
Have unquestionably the largest and best Assorted stock of riM Far*. Heal Skin ClMki, Black
Cloth Cloaks, Black Milk Velvets for Clsaka, Blek Winter Dress Oswla, Black swl CslsrN
Illki, Bracbe aal Pais* ley Lta| »ad Haarc Shswla, Hsaiaont
OttsasHltrlMil Ilwwli sam Scarfla,
At
«2.50, #3.00, #3.50, #4.00
and
|5.00.
Striped Shawls for Hisses.
Ladles Balmoral and Boulevard Skirts.*' Ladies Knit Jackets. Children's Knit Sa&jues. MuOk and Bows. Ladles and Misses Nubias. Hoods and Scarfs. Gentlemen's Scarfs and Comforts. Ladies Silk Ties and Scarfr.
A Large and Complete Stock of
HANDKERCHIEFS,
tFor Ladlea Md Qcstlcancs.
Ladies and Gentlemen's, Misses, Boys and Children's,
Gloves and Mittens,
Also our Celebrated
«PERIKOT filDGLOTE,
•••A
In all Slses and Colors.
NEW LACES, LACE COLLARS, LACE SETTS,
LACE SLEEVE^, etc.
EMBROIDERIES, EM BROIDKRED COLLARS, HANDKERCHIEFS, Ac., Ac.
ITARBEI. HOBERG CO* •pcraleiNOsnNt.
O JUpr RECEIVED AT
I Schanblin's
^LPi^ratiriiJFrlBgN Muss auwl lasik, HlaUailMHHli,
Hew J«w«lry, W*rk B«xea ^4 XtatelssM,
IsjrauMlfucr
VERY CHEAP.
Mrs. A. L. Wilson, M.D.,
Olfoni her servloes to the
LiDIBI AVD
CHILBBEN
MAHTS.
Office and Residence,
Booth Seventh street
THE MAIL
P. S. WESTFALL,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
Office, 3 South 5th Street.
TERRE-HAUTE. JAW. 4,1878.
SECONDEDITION.
TWO EDITION*
Of this Paper are published. __
The SECOND
EDITION,
ing,goes into
the
ONg CHARGE.
DAVID OREN, W. R. MERCER.
TCBBK-HAUTE, Deo. 24,1872. d28-8t
SINGER.
HOLIDAYS.
Warren, Hoberg & Go.
The venerable Adams and Jefferson retained the full clearness if not the perennial vigor of their intellect to the day of their death—the one over eighty the other ninety, years of age. Others of equal mental endowments have lost their judgment in more than childishness of mind, liviug for years like lighthouses without the lamp.
It is related of Lord Brougham that for a year before his death his mental faculties were almost completely prostrated. He had for many years ceased to be his normal self he had expressed opinions and put forth ntterances and principles altogether unworthy of those which adorned his ripened manhood and during the last year of his lift he aotually had to be restrained by gentle means of force. He at times would imagine that h,j had some engagement, or to make a speech his memory of time and plaoe seemed to have been obliterated. Sometimes his attendants indulged him in his peculiar fancies: for instance—Just before his flnal^departure from London to the Continent be got into his carriage, and believing himself to be in Paris, ordered his coachman to drive him to the man* sionof M. Thiers. Away started the carriage, and Lord Brougham was driven around the park for an hour or two, and then safely la ded at his own house, having forgotten his own order Just as completely as a short time before he had forgotten Ire was in Ixndon and not in Paris.
The Rev. Lyman Beecber, D. D.,who, daring his prime, was as herculean In body as was vigorous in spirit and stalwart in intellect, outlived his mental powers. For years before his deggi he was aa aimple as a child, and
he was aa aimple as a child, and hadlo
once he escaped to the street and assaulted, in a childish manner, people who were passing, even those who were his frends and neighbors, not recognising them.
v==
TRUST IN YOUTH.
L"d oaulde oftMclty. purpo*. Ed.ic.Uon of th. young I.
on Saturday
Even- rather like the
hahds of nearly every
reading person in the elty, Every Week's Issue Is, In fact, TWO NEWSPAPERS, In which all AdvertisemenU appear for
the
CLUCK ESCAPES THE OALLOWS. Scores upon scores of murders have been Committed in Indianapolis, and yet the Capital City has never had a hanging. Recently the, good people of that city determined upon such a spec tacle. William Cluck, a poor, besotted „w wretch, who in a drunken fit killed his about in the air with limbs and mus wife, was selected as the victim'. The
the Governor granted a reprieve of two weeks. When it is understood that the poor man could hope for no further clemency, this act was a real cruelty If he had to be hung great injustice was done in not swinging him off at the appointed time. But Cluck by the aid of some unknown friend outside has cheated the gallows, cheated the Capital City out of a spectacle and an example, and the reporters of the Indianapolis press out of much fine writing a greater portion of which had doubtless been written up in advance. On Wednesday about noon he was found in his cell writhing in the agonies of death from the effects of morphine,' which he had received in a piece of loolscap paper, enclosed in part of a newspaper. Doctors were summoned, a stomach pump was vigorously applied, but all to no purpose. Cluck died in half an hour, and Indianapolis is yet to have its first hanging..
\4 DEAD AT THE TOP. Nothing is more pleasant to contemplate than serene, ripe old age, resting on the veteran like the Indian summer that smiles on the departing year. On the other hand, nothing is sadder than to contemplate him whose body lives after the mind has gone out like the beautifnl tree once the pride of the forest or of the lawn, which has died at the top, and stands a mere wreck of what it once was in its glory.
growth of which la but adevelop-
ment of the germs in the original seed. It should be always borne in mind that the art of the teacher, to be successful, must consist in evoking the moral and intellectual, as well aa phys principles of being and action inherent in the young, and encouraging them to strengthen into mature forces. To attempt to transplant into human beings what nature has not already sowed there is as absurd as it would be to try to teach them to ascend and move
cies
officers lound him with his throat cut, motion. but the doctors sewed that up, and in iu all moral questions it is apt to be a very brief space of time a jury said he taken for granted that children will be should hang. The day was fixed tor on the wrong side. If any act of housetwo weeks ago yesterday. The con- bold mischief has been committed, downed man prepared himself, said he whether the fracture of a best china was ready to take the fearful leap into plate er the emptying of a choice pot of eternity, but by the meddling inter- jam, the little ones are at once charged ference of some well meaning citizens, with it. While their guilt is believed
only adapted to terrestrial loeo-
in, it is not uncommon at the same time to submit them to a series of cross-questions. They, of course, either from timidity or honesty, will insist upon their being innocent, whether so or not and, if not, they will thus convert what was certainly-a venial offense into the grave sin ot lying. Parents are thus often responsible for making liars of their children, as well as reckless destructives of earthen-ware and persistent thieves of sweetfneats. By this want of trust in the young they become domestic outlaws, and so conscious of their ill repute that they consider it useless to attempt to establish a character or regain a lost one. In the ordinary and unavoidable household offenses we would commend parents to be less anxious to discover the authors, and always give their little ones the benefit of the doubt as to their criminality. The surest hope of virtue in manhood comes from trust in youth.
BELIEVERS
rulers, but because the people choose their own mates. But it
«e
iat as we increase in age and wealth are gradually falling into the habit,
YOUNG MAN,
jield your
be watched, humored, and more this tr*te: You and another may meet faoe to face, in the centre of a crawling —one has to step into the mud, Inevitably. Yield the way—it is as much, and no more, your own than hia. Yield, if •s the same thing happens twenty tlmea a
We "would crave the promise of long day, and ahow yourself the best manlife but more earnestly would we seek
to be a ved from outliving our ability to think and our powers of usefulness
logo into a second childhood not only, bat into a state of infancy, having a body without a mind from this we fervently pray onrgood Father to span
nenMi
TVRRF-BADTB SATURDAY EVENING MAIL. JANUARY 4. 1873
Trust in youth is a principle of edu- the average speed on railroads, and makes out that it is much less tnan is cation which might be more widely extended than it is, with manlftat advan- generally supposed. 'Fifty or tage. Parents and teachers are too apt to consider boys and girls aa ao mueh inert matter, which can only be made into useful and virtuous men and women by violent transformation. Education is deemed a manufacturing process, by which an artificial product Is to be turned out, and qualities totally different from any possessed by the raw material. It is, however, a gross
almost universal in all old countries, of without being led in triumph every
aiding in the selection of companions, if not absolutely selecting them, for our grown up boys and girls. A writer in one of our magazines intimates that m^paging mammas are about as common among the wealthy and aristocratic in our own cities as in any part of Europe. In this connection the writer says: "There is a lady well known in one of our cities who has married off a large family of daughters eligibly, and prides herself openly on having performed a mother's duty.
Not one of them,' says this frank woman, when speaking of her sons-in-law, 'would have married a daughter of mine if I had not brought it about by little dinners and adroit attentions, by making opportunites for intercourse, and—and by putting it in their heads. And they are all very happy. *1 think the world would be much better off if the question of marriage were settled for people by anybody but themselves.'
on the opening of this
new year, here is a thought. If you will begin life with a fixed determination to claim, nothing which Is not scrupulously and entirely your own, you will never have a difficulty. You may have aright in common with some one else—in that case, ii he doesn't yield, and if the right is Indivisible,
daim gracefully. To Ulus-
g«nUeman of the two.
Wi read that the exoesslve beer drinking by the Germans in the United States la gradually producing oonaump* tlve symptoms, and thai the Germans, heretofore aa a healthy peo-
—=BX—aaammBB=== pie, are showln§ iradlcal indications of SrtAMB Mono* iaaaid to be pro- oonatltutlonal derangement and, tarparing a speech In flavor of a conatltu- thermore,s*atiatlce go to ahow that not ttanal amendment aboliahlng the Boo- htHtm many Germans are acqniring toral College system of choosing Pieai- fcomaa now aa than were ten years dent and Vloe-Pneident, and provld- ago, In proportion to the aggregate Ing fora direct election by the people, number of German adults.
We hope such an a—odment will be submitted to the Legislatures of the
... Tn Legislature of Maine will be aeveral Statea before the olooo of the aaked to amend the liquor law so that present sesalon of Gongreaa. Every- the Informer may reoeive half the finea. Tw Xjglalattiro win riasssmote body la for a change. Strike while the Aa it la, there la no indueementa for next qmwday, and oontinue in scMlon a a a a I
I
A UTI writer has been estimating
in England. This rapid speed pleased
They found that the wear and t^upon
both road and
cultivation of a plant
rolUng
yond the endurance of finance, awl
now panning on th. t«t .Id..d tbej
r°.d. In Englud th«t
England that averages fifty
miles an hour. The express traffic is usually done at the rate of thirty-five or forty miles, while the ordinary travel is about twenty-two. Railroad travel in this country is much slower, in consequence of the lack of solidity In consequence oi we
WCK
MB. BEECHKR
"I
in what Artemus Ward
styled "tru luv"— which he said waa spelled pretty much the same in all languages—have always manifested a great deal of commiseration towards
WORKED
Oriental coun
the young people in tries where matches are made by the old folks without consulting the wishes of the parties who are most interested stant expression in public and private in the tiansaction. Sentimenal lovers was, "you had gone to pot, friend, but for me." The saved man told him once. "Let me hear no more of this, or
in our own country also look on our system of free love making and matchmaking as among the best of our free even leave me aa you found me I am institutions. In their opinion this is a thankful enough of myself to acknowlfreeer country than Great Britain, not edge that I owe you my life, but it is because the people choose their own
day of my life."
THE
01 wun»yin
does not seem to en
tertain a very high opinion of some ot the literature that is to be found in church and Sunday school libraries, and in religious periodicals. In his column of Answers to Questions In the Christian Union, in answer to the interrogatory, "Is it wicked to read fiction he answers thus:
MThat
the votes for you," "I got
you into office," is the remark of many man who has assisted to get his friend electcd. Successful candidates invariably find it a great bore and suffer more from such ereecution than they would from defeat. Seneca tells a story oi a man who was saved in the triumviral proscription by one of Caesar's friends who ever afterward, boasted of his intervention, His con-
French dramatic censor has pro
hibited loose songs and lascivious costumes in the chesp music hslls and concert rooms, permitting them only in first-class theatres. This is not, as might be supposed, out of an oppressive disposition toward the lowei
classes, but the lad es and gentlemen of
and thieves amusements, the censor believes the best way of improving the upper class of morals is to improve the practices of the models they imitate. The reasoning is soumL
THE
newspaper is just as necessary
to fit a man for his true position in life as food or raiment. Show us a ragged, bare-foof boy, rather than an Ignorant one. His head will cover his feet In after life if he is well supplied with newspapers. Show us the child that is eager for a newspaper.
He
TO OPPONENTS OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE. Editor Saturday Evening Mail:
trowlly .nppwM. rujf °r.sixty fernxrf Intbtodty. Woman'. Batfng. AMoclitlon. .umbmamoDg orUMntMllnd. A .pood ofmlxty mile.
Recently, aa la well known, there was
I|liM|IlbOT
.n hoar, tor regotar pumtw tnt* lt.rch.nU, Buton, hss never been attempted but in.one instance, and that on a seven foot gauge
4
4
death to have it rung in my ears perpetually as a reproach it looks as if you
is evident had only saved me to carry me about as a spectacle. I would fain forget the misfortune that I was once a prisoner,
will make the man
ot mark in after life if you gratify that desire lor knowledge. Other things being equal, it is a rule that never fails. Give the children newspapers.
A aEWTLBMAW of Worcester^ hss just been psid a wager, wliioh he* won as follows: Having bet that Mr. Greeley would never be elected President, his opponent refused to pay the wager on the result of the recent election, thinking he had a "catch" on his betting friend. Mr. Greeley's death decided the matter paat all queatlon.
PATRONS of The Mall wishing any of the leading magazines, illustrated or other weeklies, etc., and at the eame time send a copy of The Mail to a distant friend or relative, can have botlt at very little above the ooet of the magazine aa will bo aeon by referring to our dab rates with other papers, publication of which is made on the Sixth
ssB-BS—
THE theatrical managers of New TOrk, at a meeting held last weak, doelded to diapanJl witl the uae of bills sad posters, and rely for their oommanifliMflB with the pabllo aolely upon the advertising eolumua of permanently (Established and regularly recognlssd newapapota.
Bd^on, I*w-
Cleika, Mechanica and Laborers and
women holdiDg
ahftde of
travellers, but the company soon found together with the that they passed the practicable limit objectof righting what they beof the endurance of wood and toon.
HeTe
st^k were be. wonatt wlthout representation
than
to
almost every
nijgioa. and political belief,
wrong. They are
wbyjtto
any more just
tax man under like
circumstan-
do'not M.
won..n.tfould
Uconprttad to ob.?
Uwo, in framing
which, she had no voice. If the ballot ia a prioeless boon to man, they do not see how it can wall be denied to woman. If o4b half the race haa the moral right to deprive the other half of the
rivil of cMmnahipt
ourroadsandrollingstock. Our light- nossessedin ning trains seldom exceed thirty-five miles an hour, while the genenJ passenger traffic does not exceed twenty. Freight trains usually make sixteen to eighteen miles an hour.
de
pends, Vi never knew ot a man's receiving. serious moral er intellectual injury from reading the Parables of Christ, the Pilgrim's Progress or Alston's Paradise Lost. Some of the truest books ever written have yet been fictitious in form. II by fiction you mean such books .as Adam Rede or John Halifax, or Robert Falconer, we do not think reading fiction an unpardonable sin—nor indeed an offense. But if by fiction you refer to such fiction as one finds in dime novels, the lower order of Sunday school books, fulsome religious biographies, and the campaign lives of publio men, we have no hesitancy in saying that it is a great waste of time and attention, and frequently injurious to morals to read them." it
see why this right Is not possessed in an equal degree, by woman as against man, as by man agalnat woman. If, as is generally admitted, the larger degree of purity and virtue is possessed by woman and if these are desirable qualities in politics, then they declare it a great political blunder to deprive the country of the votea of that half of its citisens who would bring to the polls the greater volume of these desirable elementa. Indians, idiots, murderers, thieves, bribe taken and women, are the only American citisena now depriy" ed of the ballot by law, and it aefems de sirable to these Woman Suffragiata that our mothers, our wives anft our daughters betaken out of that category as expeditiously as possible. It is possible they may be wrong In their premises, wrong in their reasonings, and wrong in their ooncluaionst but they unquestionably do moat earneetly and conscientiously belieye themselves to be right. They would not question the motives of those who differ with them. They readily admit, aa a fact, that-as yet the majority of the better class of the citizens of the State are opposed, more or less actively, to the measure they propose, while they, with much greater gladness, acknowledge that their cause has almost absolutely no friends among the debased and criminal elements of society. They lay no claim to infallibility—none to a monopoly of virtue. They only ask tor the cause they represent a flair, candid hearing. They count discussion and hope their cause may profit by it( They are ready to be shown that they are wrong and will be diligent in their attendance upon any meetings that may be Instituted with the intention of winning them from any way ot error, into which they may have fallen. Will their opponents pledge themaelvea to deal with equal fairness and liberality towards them
THE STATE LIBRARIAN Shall a woman be State Librarian ia about the first question the Legislature has to decide at ita regular aession. Mrs." Sarah A. Oren has presented her name to the Assembly for the position. Of all the candidates, and they are not a few, ahe Is not surpassed In qualifications for the plaoe. She la highly educated and respected. She Is a soldier's widow, supporting herself and fatherless children with her own labor. For years she hss been connected with the Indianapolis High School, and her warmest friends are the leading teachers and ednoational men and women throughout the State.
4
Her eminent qualifications and high
hM her
of of th„ mq#t
Parisian sooiety fashions and meters Jthe A«embly, and much in their fashions and lnteret manifested ita the 1 1
Let the Legislature recognize ability and fitness for the place, and at the ssme time pay a portion of Ita debt of gratitude to the soldier's widow and orphana by the election of Mrs. Oren.
The Methodist remarks upon the growth of Spiritualism as an illustration of the "great matter a little fire klndleth:"
Beftoia~wfiat a groat matter a Uttle fire klndleth 1" The Rocheeter Spirit-
tare. The mischief has spread ovar the Hew Wcrld. over England andJRranoe, and much of the remainder of Western
haa. nevarthefesoTruiMd the-rtligio'us feltL and moral ehsraetsr of thousands, II haa react sd Into unbelief and down right infldelitv with other thouanda, and aent still otherthousands to Inaane aaylams. At taut reached the remote Eaat, and entered the mnet fertile field of auperstltloa la the world. An Eaat imAimi iiUnt of the London Tlmea saya that "spirit rap^niT haa become a amoag the iliodooe, and that It threatona to apnad wrnrthe whole country. It eo«ld not find on earth a mora congenial aoll for ita sapoistitioua extravagandea.
AVTER all, it la poaalble that the experiment of poetal cards which oar government is about introdudng will prove a failure. It ia pronounced failure iniSngland. For private parposes they are said to be aaelesa, aa no person cares to expose personal or social affalra to the eurioua eyes of poatoffice derks. The London Era says that in Englaad "they hare become a scandalous abuse, and are used for the worst purpose."
THIS
Item from
a
MANY
ABOUT
NINE
,BlInwlttal
Mrs. Oreo's election would l» something new In the history Of .this State. It would ikot, however, be an experiment. Both Minnesota and Michigan have ejected woman to the aame position with the most satisfactory results. A member of the letter State told the writer of this that the Library had never, in the history of the State been conducted in a better manner. This position has in the oast too often been given out as a reward for political services rendered to the dominsnt party, rather than as a recognitio npf superior qualifications for the duties of the office. We are gla| to see the attempt being made to elevate the State Library, to a plaoe above that of political stock jobbing, and we trust, and believe it will be successful.
REV.
THE
late San Francisco
psper: "String beans and peaa area trifle dearer aaparagua haa advanced new potatoes are quotable
INDIANAPOLIS
they do not
A
at
to per
pound green corn and egg plant aro out of market no strawberries have been received for more than
a
week.
Lettuce, 25c to 30c per dozen cucumbers, 15c per dozen," etc.
has an elaborately
constructed gallows, good and new, for sale.
The City and Vicinity.
T* Mall SatMcrlbers.—Watch the date on your direction label. It Indicates the time when your subscription expires, at which time the paper will, invariably, be discontinued without further notilcation.
THE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL is on sale each Saturday afternoon by A. H.Dooley, -Opera House. S. R. Baker A Co., P. O. LSbby. M. P. Craftn, »Opp. Post Qffloe. Will B. Sheriff, Farts, His. Walter Cole,.. ...Marshall, Ills. Harry Hill, J9ullivan, Ind. James Allen, Clinton, Ind. J. B. Dowd, ...Roekville, Ind. Frank Dowling_ _.Brasil, Ind. C. V. pecker Mattoen, Ills. H. J. Feltus......... Greeneastle, Ind.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Opera House—Black Crook. Dowllag Hall—Robinson's Minstrels, Terre-Haute Baak. Social Hop—Pence's Hall. Notions, etc.—Wittig A Co. Dry Ooods—W. S. Ryee A Co. A eood Work—Denlo Bros. Proapeetua-Indlanapolla Journal. 81nger Sewing Machine. Ten e-Haute Commercial College.
RAIN
at last
I
DID
you swear off?
GLOOMY
week, this.
NEXT
week—Week of Prayer.
THE
school bell rings on Monday.
Go
TO
church on the first Sunday of
the year.
How about that prediction of an open winter?
THE
I ..iv.
To be sure, the annual peach killing haa taken place.
Holidaya panned out a good
deal of matrimony.
Six end-men make fun for the Robinson minstrel troupe next week.
ABOUT
COR* COB.
twelve thousand tojs have
been slaughtered In this elty up to djftte,.
c".
merchants took New Years to
square up and take a? fair start with 1878. .fVtf ,-
the middle of this month is the
time now fixed for that Old Folks' concert.
hundred persons were fed with
|2,625 at the Station House the past year. A
NUMBER
FIVE
of bueiness changea and
removals are. in contemplation with our merchants.
hundred and seventy-jfive mar
riage licenses were Issued in this county during the year 1872.
SALOON
the
BE
THE
1 1
keepers complain of the
amount of "swearing off." [t won't last long though, they say.
careful of your dates.
E.
T.
THE
tan extermin-
tra crook to that long familial al "2" and make a "3" of it.
O. heps this wint rat the
Opera House Promenade [all are large, pleasant and brilliant.^
Terre Haute Weekly
MI
il is one
of the best papers that finds it our sanctum.—[Greenup
way to if.
Mail.
SUBSCRIPTIONS
received at lis office
for all the leading magazines Aid periodicals, and money forwarded at our
W. W.
lanapolis
HIBBRN,of In
will preach at Asbury Chap 1 to-mor-row morning and evening at she usual hqprs
Legislative Judiciary (ummittee
has been going through tbi books of theT. H. A I.
R. R.
Co., tbi week,to
see if that corporation owesihe school fund anything ,to us in a nn proved shows chair worthy of
THE
Sullivan Union come
new dress of type and greatl in appearaaee. Mr. Cou' eminent fitness for the edi^rial and Is making a good paper a liberajjpupport.
A
1 on
6trof the most Interest! features of the Holiday season was he elegant supper served at the Natl nal House last Saturday evening, to tm employes by J. A. 'proprietor, ition men, who
of the Eagle Iron Worl Parker, th whole-eoul Nothing is lost by such of the faithfal, bard worjtij help to build up the towi
TOE members of the
Woi
lan Suffrage rill bear in meeting on Jpath, who [the asaoclabut short
Association of this dty, mind the regular monthl Monday evening. Prof, waa expected to addres tlon Is prevented by sick apeeehes will be made by and others. The meetln In the High School sees! Normal School building.
S.Tennsnt will be held room of tho
