Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 6, Number 6, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 August 1875 — Page 5

J* W

THE MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE:

THE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL toon sale «ub Hanudty afternoon by A. H. Dooiejr..... A.. .Opera House. B.K. Baker A U. r.

Craft*..

P.O. Lobby.

Opp. Port Office.

W. W. Byer» Bench Block. A. E. PHAUO Cor.«to and Udsyettettt. Part*, Ills. Ely A Conner Waiter Cole.~_ M. H. Dix. Ben. Allen J. B. Dowd P. L. Wheeler C. V. Decker J. K. LAngdoD O. W. Oreene_.

111*.

Kulllv&n Ind

... Clinton, Ind. „.„RockvllIe, Ind. Brazil, Ind. _J!attoon, IUa. ..Oreenawtk', Ind.

Waveland, Ind

Dell Holling**rortB—.^JKnishtaylllt Ind. C. L. Yearn ......Oakland, Ills. F.M.Curley .„Ht. Marys, Ind Charles Taylor Rosedale, lud. K.B. Plnnell... Hiram LicklighUr... W. E. Cole Charley Wilson

Kan sax, Ilia,

....... Annapolis, Ills. _...Perrysville, Ind. ...- Danville, Ind.

f&~Person* leaving the city for the sum.' mer, or even for a few weeks, can have The Mail sent them regularly and promptly, pottage paid, for Jive cents a week, or 50 cent* for three month*.

How is thin for high**—the Wabash.

IKSFIRED soda" is what some call it.

THTE home crop of blackberries will be short.

OWi'

THE Grand Jnry was again in session this week. •,*»

LINTOX street has been ordered opened at once. .?.u

mi ii _.• ..

THE market waster's receipts for last month were 931^40.

HAVE you noticed that the days are growing shorter.

JOHN'S sawmill is busy getting out piling to All numerous orders.

THE next few days will decide the late of the corn crop in this vidulty.

TNK council is going wild on sowers now. Half a dozen are proposed.

Futm has gone up from seven to nino dollars per barrel sinoe our last issue,

THE tlmo for paving south Fifth street has been extended to tho 1st of October.

FOR the flrst time in many months there was a lull council Tuesday night.

MUST put flour up to nine dollars said a city miller. "Poverty begins at homo!"

IT may bo a nice business sometimes, but an ice business is'nt a nice business this Bum mor.

IT is said that thoro will be a change In the management of tho L. C. A S. W. railroad shortly.

SIXTH street will bo graded and gravOlod forthwith from Crawford street south to Osborno.

TIIK order ibr paving the sidewalks on Fourth street, fro HI Park to tho I. A St. L. railroadrhas been rescinded.

THE effect of the Hood is bad on tho brickyards, but worse on property owners who have boon ordered to pave.

FOURTEENTH stroet front Main to Eagle is to be graded and cindered at the expense of tho adjoining property.

IT may be a consolation to know that whon a bee, wasp or hornet gtiugs, it is nearly always at the expenso of its life.

A NUMBER of excursions, basket meetings, picnics and the like have been Indefinitely postponed on account of the rains.

THERE were forty interments in tho city como'.ery during the month of July —thirty-two* from tho city and eight from the country.

THE special election for councilman in the Fourth ward, Monday, resulted in the choice of Thomas J. Gist, Republican, a majority of twenty-oevon.

THE first mall from the East reached tho city by the I. «tSt. L. railroad, Wednesday night. Tliero was over a hundred bags of it, making two wagon loads.

THE oouncll concurred in the report of the judiciary committee against paying back any part of the money paid Into the city treasury for liquor license last year.

IT is claimed by well informed parties that there is still plenty of wheat in the county, notwithstanding the losses by tho rains and high water. That standing yet in the shock Is not all ruined.

WORK IS delayed on the new market house by the fkllure of Mr. Helm to receive the galvanised Iron cornice before the floods cut off railroad communication. The cornice was ordered shipped from Cincinnati August 1st. It will probably come to hand next week.^

THE Judiciary committee of the council reported frvorably on the question of the city's bearing one-half the expense of a new Pencc around the Normal School property, but Instated that the money should come out of the school fond and not (torn the general ftind of the city.

in 11 i.—i ~.i i~—.i

THE County Sunday School Convention at Hartford, Tuesday, was attended by about two thousand people, and the exercAsen are reported to hare been vety Interesting. The next convention will be held In the First Prflabytwian church to this city on the fast Tuesday In No* member, next.

THE water-works company Is eonrid* wring plaua to secure Its property on the irirer from danger by fature foods. II has been determined to either lake the building down and re erect Item a higher and safer poalUon, or build a strong :*sWattof

mamrntj around the pressut

otruotore. The former plan will doubt* loss bo adopted.

FIRES are quite comfortable these evenings. 1 SPRiNoohlckens retail at twenty cents eggs st eight and a-thlrd.

THE grape crop will probably be ruined by too mnoh wet weather.

FESTIVAL at Si. Agnes Hall this ning admission free supper 25 cents.

ml

Of It,

FARMERS are making slow work drying their hay in their clothes wring-

vonT

BRANCH on the E. A C. Wad is

furnishing this city with watermelons so for. THERE has been no occasion for hauling water to keep the ferries running thissummer. *4*

THE only direct route now open to Chicago is by way of the Midland, at 10:90 this evening.

THE river has fallen altogether, up to noon to-Iay, twenty-six inches. There is still much drift running. „,

THERE havo been heavy rains north and west of us this week, but none in the immediate vicinity of the city.

OVER a thousand bags of mail wore received at and sent away from our postoffice during Wednesday and Thursday.

BACKWATER at Mdkea creek, six miles north of Vincennes, stopped travel yesterday on the Evansville A Crawfordsville railroad.

THE Young Men's Christian Association continue to hold noon-day prayer meetings at their rooms over Wilson Beos. A Hunley's dry goods store.

NATURAIAY, a good deal of the wheat will burn up in the effort to save it, it being a peculiarity of some cook stoves to roast everything that goes into the oven.

MONTGOMERY QUEEN'S circus was un able on account of the breaks in the railroads, to get here Wednesday. They tnrned bsck towards Chicago, but will probably show here some time this month.

NOTHING can equal the look of disgust which will overspread his face, when a man who has been sponging ice water at one place all summer goes in some day lor a drink and finds that they for got to get ice that morning.

THE noted floods in the Wabash occurred In the years' 1828. 1875,1858 snd 1844, and the high waters ranked in the order named—the present riso being second only to that of 1828. This we have from authority not to be questioned.

MARIUAGE LICENSES.—The following marriage licenses have been issued by the County Clerk since our last report:

William McAUat^rand Amanda Illggtns, S! Ins Ooborn and Rona A. McNeil. eh Trader and Catherine lller (teorge II. Mill* and Mary M. Palmer John H. Tiittr id Hester Brunswick. Harmon Ilaun- and Ouslna Oerdls.

I NTENM EXTS.—The following is a list ot interments Ijn the city oqmetory sinoe last report: j,

July.**)—Mrs. Catherine Walker, aged S7 yearn coniretitlON. July 81—Eugene and Lorens, twin sons of John O, Helnl, aged 0 monthH and 18 d«y«.

Au«. 3—Infant of Jaiue« Ilofte still-born. AUK. a of a a born.

A NUMBER of small burglaries, and attempts at burglary have taken place In the city during the past woek. This Is hardly to be wondered at with the town and country as full of "tramps" as they are. A well oohd noted work bouse would probably do as much toward the abatement of this kind of crimoan any other thing. City and ooanty authorities should give the subject attention.

THE latest information respecting the condition of the wheat crop in this county convinces us that, excepting on the low lands where it has been overflowed and washed away, the loss to It from the wet weather will not exceed ten per cent. Old farmers say they have stacked wone wheat lota of times. This has been the hardest week on It of any yet being so cloudy all the time.

,.i im-i

BUSINESS men who are wise will advertise In the Saturday EveuingGacette. No paper ever published In Terre Haute had a circulation equal to it.—[Yesterday's Gasette.

Our friends over the way have a good circulation, but they should not make such a statement as the above. The Saturday Evening Mall is published in Terre Haute and It has a circulation MORE THAN DOUBLE that of the Saturday Evening Gasette.

RATHER a singular case came op in the council Wednesday evening. Four ycMs ago tho 9fitti of May, William Schmidt bought a tot In tho city cometery which up to this time be has not, fortunately, bad occasion to use. Two or three months ago he desired to make some Improvements about the lot and coming to examine it, it was toosd that since the purchase somebody had been hurried In It, The grave Is a large one but nobody about the cemetery can tell who tsbnried in it or whan tt waa dog. It la a mystery to every ooo, the superintendent lodnded. Mr. Schmidt now makea application for another lot in place of the one so singularly "jumped.

FOft reaching the country and the neighboring towns, the Saturday Evening Mail as an advertising medium Is uusuipaassd in foot there is no medium that approaches Ik By extra exertions this ootside circulation has recently been greatly increoaed, and It la daily growing laiger. Advertisers interested in reaching tbe forming eoauauaity are Invited to fWt The Mail oflfae on any Thursday evening, at which time the first edition taaen tout, and ese for themselves U»e extent ot this outside dreeiatlotu

TERKE HAUTE. SATURDAY EVENING- MAIL

Tilt FLOOR.

The rain has atjast ceased and the river is alowly returning to lie channel. Immense destruction has been done to crope and railroads In every direction bare suffered terribly. On Saturday evening the river ahowed a rise of eighteen feet above low water mark. On Tuesday it reached the! hlght of twentyfive and a-half feet—two inches highe^ han tho great flood of '68. During Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, fears were entertained for the safety of the three bridges at thia point. Thousands of people visited the river daily and the excitement and anxiety were painful. As fiir as the eye could reaoh, the river was dotted with floating wheat and hay telling of wide-8pr^aJl calamity and ruin above. •.

The most distressing reports wore brought In from every direction. Farmers along the river In the vicinity of this city had their entire crops awept away ss well as their fences, out houses and stock. No trains could run on any of the rallrooda except the E. AC. and that was not considered ontlrely safe. Of course there was no mails from anywhere and no guessing wben there would ever be any. Altogether It was very gloomy time and we sincerely hope we may never experience another like it.

Tuesday afternoon the water oeased rising and dnrlng the twenty-four hours following fell perhaps two inches. Since that it has fallen more rapidly. The last rain of any consequence was on Monday. No very serious damage was done to any property in the city, though much was no doubt prevented by extreme watchfulness on the part of the owners of property bordering on the river. The water works building and machinery was threatened. Embankments were built up both above and below it for a hundred feet, of gunny bags stuffed with sand, and slag from the rolling mill. Tuesday evening the building was deemed so unsafe that visitors were forbidden to enter it though the pumps were kept in constant operation throughout. Had the water gone six inches higher it might have been impossible to save the building. At three o'clock in the afternoon it lacked but s'x inches of reaching the upper edge of the stone window sills.

IN GENERAL.

All the railroads have suffered and It will be several days yet before trains will run with moch regularity.

The greatest damage to the Vand&lia was between this city and Indianapolis. At Reelsvllle, a mile and a-half of track was washed away and half a mile of it was turned up in the ditch with the ties on end. A fine iron bridge at Cartersburg was swept away. The damage west of here has been repaired and light trains are running through to St. Louis.

Tho principal loss to the I. A St. L. was tho bridge at Fern. At Otter Creek the trestle is in a bad shape but trains have been running over the road since Wednesday night, transferring at Fern.

The damage to the E. A C. has boon very great south of Vincennes, but this end of the road has been passable all the time.

The E. T. H. A C. was washed out in seven places between this city and Newport. Four bridges will be to replace, including the one at Otter Creek which was only moved oat of'position about a foot.

On the Midland but one bridge was down between this and Paris. Trains are running again.

The C. A T. H. was badly torn up, but will be all right again in a few days. The L. C. A S. W. suffered fearfully and making repairs will occupy much time yet.

The I. JL St, It. brought in ihe first mail from the east, Wednesday night, at eleven o'clook. There was general rejoicing over it, Thursday morning.

The eastern half of the dam at M«rkle's mill is gone, and the banks of the creek below are washed into all imaginable shapes. The county bridge below is Inaccessible from the road on the other side as the embankment leading to it has been washed away, leaving a gap thirty feet deep.

The loss to private individuals all over this and the adjoining counties Is much too great to be specified. It will amount to millions of dollara. Nothing approach' Ing It has ever been experienced In thia region before.

It Is claimed by few perwoiis that the river was higher in June, 1858, but a contrary opinion prevails generally.

The early part of the week, the Chicago mall was sent south on the K. & C. to Vincennes thence east on the O. A M. to Seymour thence north on the J. M. &Lto IndlanapoUa and from there to Chicago by the P. A C. road. TWs will show the dUBculUee employee of the Postal Department have bad to contend with.

THE steamer Prairie City wee nine hours coming up from HQtaohvills, Thursday. The crew and passenger* report the looks of things along the Ivor aa most distressing. Miles and mllea of splendid cornfields are ten and twenty foet under water. That portion of tho levee whloh was not washed away was for miles crowdod with hogs, horass and oattle which were being fed by their OWMRV from ekiflh, when they were fed at all, but many of them were almost fomtshed for food, pad were wadlngand swimming out to eat the half covered corn. Hundreds of houses wove surrounded by water, the water in some eeses being op to tbe.eavea, and the roofc showing where the shingles hod been torn sway to permit the ownerato sape. Ttae tittle steamer Bonansa Is doing maoh good by reecuing cattle, boga, etc., towing a flat about tor that purpoee from one form to another.

THOSE people wht were disturbed yesterday by tho ringing of tho Court House bell and assembled so promptly to aaoertaln the cause, fonnd that anew bell rope was what waa the matter,

THEactual loea to the Vandalla railroad, to say nothing of the loas by the interruption to its business, will not foil for short of 9150,000. In other words it will require that amount of money to put it in as good condition as it was two weeks ago.

"CrrKKN" McElroy, through the oolumns of the Journal, has been going for officers Vsnderver and Gibson of the. police force. It will behoove citizen McElroy to carry himself muchctralghter hereafter than he has formerly if be would escape wojese trouble than has yet befallen him.

QUITE a number of churches are closed for tho usual summer vacation, but enough will bo open to-morrow to supply the demand. Among the announced open churches will be St. Stephens, first Presbyterian in the morning, Christian, Asbury M. E., Centenary and St. Agnes. Rev. G. P. Peale, of the Christian, preaches in the morning on "Providence," and in tho evening on "Practical Christianity." Rev. N. L. Brakeman, at Centenary, discourses in the morning on "Spiritual Strengthhow acquired," and at night or "The Perfect Example."

COUNTERFEIT bills of the following denominations are afloat in this city. Everybody should be on the watch, as they are said to be well executed and hard to dotoct:

Five dollars on the First Nationsl bank of Chicago. five dollars on tho Third National bank of Chicago.

Five dollars on the Traders' bank of Chicago. Five dollars: on the. First Nstional bank, Caxton, Illinois.

Five dollars on the Merchant's National bank of Illinois. Fivo dollars Union National bank, Illinois.

Ten dollars Merchants' National bank, Philadelphia. Ten dollars: First National bank, Richmond, Iuaiana.

Merchants snd others should look out for these counterfeits. All are well executed. LOSS OF LIFE BY THE FLOOD IN

CLAY COUNTY. [Brazil Miner.]

The saddest report received, is the drowning of seven persons—a Mr. Easter and family of Daniel Frits, consisting of himself, wife, and four children, who lived ten miles south of Bowling Green, and were seen in the top story of their house, Tuesday, going down with the stream, when at its fullest headway. It was Impossible to reaoh them. These are the only ones reported lost. No doubt many more would have been drownedjhad it not been for tne energy of Mr. Jas. Black, of Bowling Green, who put men to making boats from lumber on his own place. In a very short time, boats ana rafts were constructed, and the citizens started to render what assistance they could to those lingering in tho bottoms, and a great many were saved from watoiy graves. In many places people were clinging to trees, on top ot houses, and in every place where they could get away from the water.

.. A REMARKABLE CURE. Six years ago Mrs. Carson employed two of tho first surgeons in thia State, and tbey removed by surgory a malignant cancer from her face. In a short time it returned in a very aggravated form her life was endangered for four years. She employed Dr. L. C. Lome be performed a perfect cure in two weeks' treatment, without surgery or pain. Persons desirous of obtaining this lady's address will please call upon Dr. h. C. Lorne at his office opposite the Postoffloe, Terre Haute, Ind. Dr. Lorne guarantees to remove every species of cancer in the first and second stage of the disease without surgery or pain in seven to twenty days, or no chaige. Dr. L. C. Lorne, late of New Orleans, has permanently located In our city. All that are suffering with any form of acute or chronic disease can consult him at his office opposite the postoffloe

NAILS-%150 RA TES.

The Terre Haute Iron A Nail Works Company have some heavy nails 20d, SOd, 40d, Spikes, lOd, fence, Ac, slightly damaged by water, but just as good aa any, and what Is needed for city curb* ing and bridge building, which they will sell for 2H cents per pound at their works. aag7-2t.

WRIGHT* KAVFFMAN, At the popular oorner of Seventh and Main, are sending out to-day among other good things, ,» GOOD BUTTER,

YOUNG CHICKENS, GREEN APPLES, HUCKLEBERRIES,

ANTELOPES, TOMATOES, SQUASHES, Aa.

—GET YOUR NOTIONS AT THE CENT STORE, FOURTH STREET.

NO. SM MAIN STREET.

(fell all of next week without foil, for goods must be "turned and not carried." THE PRAIRIE CITY EMPORIUM can never be excelled in cheap artidoe.

-TEN PAIR LADIES HOSE FOftfiO cte^ CENT STORE.

THE ItO WE SEWING MACHINE Is always ready for bosineas and always gives satisfaction. It ie the only machine in which the needle-bar shuttle earlier and other principal wearing parte are made of stool and hardened, and consequently will outwear any otlaer.

Ladieo,

postmasters and others can earn a tew dbllani with great ease by canvassing In their immediate neighborhoods for The Saturday Evening Mail. See prospectus in another column.

BUCK 0ASHMERE&

lt'1

MVBU wivra. Iron Frame Grenadines, ^CST RECEIVED AT—

W.I.BT€£A€0.

Black Fare Mohairs!!

At BO and 00 eonts per jrard. These goods and lll€H CASH* IBII, wilt be vety desirable in a short time, almost necessary articles of purchase. We have in advance of Ute season and a dull eastern market, bought them under price, and for the present will sell them as we bought them.

TAKE ADVANTAGE —orODE—. ".'ST#

DISCOUNT PRICES!!

AXD SUPPLY YOURSEIJr WITH I^

BLACK CA8HSEKE8 aid BLACK PURE S0HAIBS!

W.8.BWEACO.

"ALBANI"

KID GLOVES!

In ALL COLORS, TWO BUTTONS, »L25 per Pair, and Warranted.

W.8.KYCEACO.

OBITUARY.

MBS. CHARt-OTTE WOOD.

Died in thia city, August 3rd, 1875 Mrs. Charlotte Wood, aged eighty-eight years and three month*.

Venerable in the fullness ot years and womanly honors, Rhe has gone down to the dark valley of the shadow of death, having finished the work of a long ana useful life.

The trials of the morning and noon of life were bravely met, and the shade of evening brought the stillness and quiet of death to a tired and weary soul aux.iously,waiting the end.

She'was a pioneer settler of Terre Haute forty yeafs ago. But already the young city was honored and respected at home and abroad by such citizens asChauncey Rose, Judge Demoting, the Messrs Linton, Col. Thomas H. Blake, Dr. Blak, Curtis Gilbert, Jenckes, Ray, Bourne, King, McGregor, Warrens, Crawfords, Pateraons, Donaldson, Judge Huntington, Lucius H. Scott, Dowling, Farrin ton, Ross, Barbour, Rev. W. Jewett, Crul Moffatt, Capt. Wasson, Cunningham, Jos. O. Jones, Judge Kinney, Wright, GoodkinsjUsherjGriswood, Earlyn, Groverman, Major Odgen,Lieut. Welker,of the United States army, andG. ,W. Cutter, author of the celebrated lines on steam, Drs Modisett, Septer P&ttrick, Daniels, Ball Holmes, Hitchcock and many others equaly worthy, who made it an attractive point for ti^ose seeking homes in a new country. These were citirens of Terre Haute at that time, and the Uni ted States officer above named was en gineer on the National road and roomed at Mrs. Wood's.

It was a community of intelligent, refined cultivated ladies and gentlemen, rarely equaled, never excel I

To this place, in 1835, came Mrs. Wood, a widow with three sons and six daughters. A native of New Jersey, she married in 1808 John Wood, a native of London, and settled in Baltimore. Her husband was a captain in the war of 1812, and for his military service, a pension was grantedt to the widow.

She came to this new home with large and helpless family, and with shattered fortune, having most honorably given up, beyond legal requirements, the last of her means for the payment of securities. But a generous ana kind people received her in the spirit of love, which was amply repaid bv a life of usefulness and unselfish devotion to them and her family. The honorable positions held by her family is the best evidence of thci* careful and prudenteducation.

The eldest son, Surgeon Maxwell W. Wood, now senior of the United States navy, has ranked at every period of life as one of the most distinguished medical officers of the navy and to whom this branch of the service is largely indebted for radical and important professional improvements. He long presided at the head of one of the navel medical bureaus in Washingtoi

Charles Wood, deceased, the second son, was long and favorably known in this community, in business circlcs snd as an offioer of the Vandulia railroad.

Dr. John Wood has for the last thirty years enjoyed high profe*«imial honor*. The eldest daughter married Engineer Wood, and died young.

The second married Nathaniel Pres'on, long cashier of the Indiana state bank. Tne third married P. M. Donnelly, now and long one of the most prominent city druggists.

The fourth daughter married 8. B. Hammill, Etq., of Sullivan county, long and favorably known as an attorney, and having attained many official honors.

The fifth daughter married Dr. John R. Cunningham, for twenty-five years a prominent and successful druggist of this city.

The sixth, snd youngest married Moses W. Williams, lor many yean a widely known and successful merchant of thte city, and at present vice president of the gas company.

From these marriages eame thfrtr-one grandchildren and five gr?at grandchildren to the deceases.

Bat few mothers anywhere can exhibit such a roll of family worthies: the jewels of this Roman mat roe. Witnln a few months she had been called to mourn tbe death of her daathter, Mrs. Williams, and of her sons-in-law, Hammill and Cunnindhsm. fte success oj her life in preparing for usefulness to society so many children stay be ascribed toiler exalted and wmrtHtf Gtafatiaa faith, guiding, directand sustaining her. Alwsys at the

Ude of the sZek end afflicted, she mercifully gave consolatios and personal aid. Always willing to help, night snd dsy, she was /ev more than a third of a century, aa ud of coosolation in the chambers of sickness and death of her friends and neighbors.

She has. peace/ally dial in the foil* new of years sod bono share the blessings of a which gave her strmgth and weary mil* tt ill*, and in the p«lh to deat&i

LINENEMBROIDERMSUITS!!

AT rifTKKM DOLUB8.

We have on hand a lot of the above Suits that have been selling at 35 and 30 dellair, and now offer them at ...

Fifteen Dollars to Close Oat.

W.8.RVCEACO.

White Suits Sacrifice.

Parasols, Sun Umbrellas aad all Summer Goods Slaughtered j#

in prices at *f

W.S.BYCE&CO.

Gros Grain Black Silks,

Satin face and lnsterlees in flne and heavy cord. These area very fine lot of choke Silks, whleli we will sell at same pilusrof commoner Silks to reduoe Mock.,, ,.v,

W. 8. RYCE CO.

EBB A WIGLEY

Have purchased Use

JOB ROOMS!

from which have been tumad out vithln the past three yean, the

BEST JOB POINTING

Men who do not hate to keep a I their side, from which to got speeftne use their own lasts sad judgment.

We will keep on hand a kinds of jpaner stock, so that ne delayed for lack of materiaU

r.

XSVER DONE IN THIA CITY

v.

specimens of whJch can be found In almost every business house in this city, aud In every surrounding town for fifty miles.

We Eapley

no printers but those whom taste and skill cannot be equsled In this olty, or excelled In the state. Men who have learaec their trades under Uie

Matt Skillftol Printers In the Country.

phcr st

mess, bet

fell supply ot alf ork wl will be

1IS?

&•

Thera I* In connection with the Job office,

A Complete Book Bindery,

r*v

aud we tit thetetora prepared te compete with any establishment for •r

Book Binding, or

of sag kind.

visrnNa

I*

Blank Work,

Ajrrrszxa mv A

CAI

W A

THREE SHEET POSTER

wiUbedsoe la Sm ftsO®ss sod/Ml (sisf la

iottOS.

7

i* "5 ft

Wehsvei Jria dsteAL— dssling is our fSetfen luetics wo(fc«aael9thJ*sty.

ihgM of this bastnes* wKn a lofitowtD. and Wtu. with Mr ons, stvtag them entire gtfs-

BMot a Men's sban «Tme'

TiSSB 41 Vfmst.