Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 6, Number 41, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 April 1876 — Page 4

se 1

THE

A

PAPfcK THE PE

A

terbk haute,

irri,

pril

People and Things

Men of U»te-»free- lumbers 1 Boots am going ©otof faabion, Doctor's riches are ill-golton gaius. Consumptives often live bury eveiy well member of the family.

Hash omelette" is what tbo fanhiouahle boarding houses call it. The market i« overstocked with good "r advice and pour lamp chimney**.

Never wear a pistol where it might be discharged by a kick.—[Experienced Exchange.

Coal oil Johnny, who ran through |300,000 some years ago, cultivates a small farm out West,

Living beyond one's tnconip is like trying to walk a raco with a number flight lbot encased in a number six boot.

To dance well a man must kno\\\ as little as pos-Urto of everything else, lie can balance partners better if his hair is parted in the iniddlo.

Mexico is a lazy country, but the sight of a drove of Texas cattle will fills Mexican with the enterprise of a fruit tree peddler.—Chicugo Times.

Joaquin Miller tells of a man whom his friends thought niutt lie, because there wasn't truth enough in the world to keep him talking as much as ho did.

A sweet smile wreathes the countenance of the genial Colfax as ho reads the papers now-a-days. What's a few hundred dollars of Credit Mobiler, any way ,',' ILK' 3

This will boa busy year. Just think of it 366 days, 53 Sundays, leap year, Centennial celebration, and the Presidential election, and perbaps^th«jr|iJleniutu.

Some people regard it as singular tbnt a man "who never played cards in his life, because it's wicked," will exact 15 porCefit. interest from a widow.—[Detroit Frco Press.

When you see a man with ontfshoulder higher than the other, passing down the street, do not pronounce it deformity at once. Possibly a button may be wanting soinowhere.

In Kuropcau circles a pretty accurate idea seems to prevail in regard to the summer programme, as far as America is concerned it is that the Centennial Fair will be a mere side-show to the Presidential Circus.

We wish (o call the attention of those who are endeavoring to solve tho problem, "What is tho cause of the great stagnation in business?" t« the fact that the Atuifican wear out over 50,000,(XK) yards of shoe strings annually

Tennie (Wlaflln bays the spirit of the First '|^lcfa is her jrqard:an. We always thought tho unfortunate Kmper or would h«?e!to work ont hisacoount some way the next world, but who would have supposed be would haye to look alter Tennie

Jokes have a way of creeping into tho most solemn occasions. A gentleman with a somewhat obscure cuticle was scalded to death, and when the funeral oration was dolivered by his colored brother, tho preacher constantly alluded to "our 'ateemed friend."

The editor of* the Saline tmcfe advet* tlses for a lawyer to conduct ft libel suit:

44

One with talent (not cheek) desired." A lawyer with talent and without cheek is as great a humbug as one with cheek and without talent. A bappy combination of both qualities makes your true Choate.

The Philadelphian receives dally about •even postal cinfla with «"Iear eonsfn, expoct me in June, with a friend whom you will b« dellgbtoii to know. It will be impossible for me to stay more than three weeks. I am AO glsd tfiat wo have begun to correspond again." Philadelphia demands a fast mall train to the dead lettor office* "r

A college profewor at Burlington

thought he'd see what the boys were up to in a sophomore's room, whence issued sounds of song and clinking glasaes. So he shuffled quietly down the hall in his stocking f«Wt, but when ho struck a small forest of tacks with the small ends up, ho hoppetf right back again, and kept talking to for half an hour, while ho put little pieces of courtplaster all olerjtfc# *o!ei of bis

ten $4 pits for rtr&MiLijQ#,

The trosston Hulletln his prepared the 1

Ki

The

Jn lift?

IM

TIKH! ho had breath

For an aiy Ur-Vfa!Un£ fpr a rise. For a »s»ker—earth. Foral iudmttQ—"Iketterqff Kor» I'?' w.r: !. \.y*

A will :iOwi» l»r*w»r h«»r»ill* mc* o'*r--hcV oa *-hls For a ihrtMwf.* 'I For »clorJor^WJiftiAa With TAttent*." Far hcirt*F—I Iwr attrt iliey a I W 1 it For a pstusrj 'f

On earth he ftft tornrd clay to dfU.Jint now h«% tumwl to clay hlmseir. For a raa xrin.lcr- rmjer^af^. For a dr miikiOT—"For U»e Bvmwti of Kti«worl4 AWAy."

Ko7ama»l?«U dlrtcior: In beating Tim* was paesed, But Tfiw-wtt bmU'i l»li» at urte Foratattor -Anchowd. h\r an a*icuiTi^r—CJooe For a *a:cJin»ak«-r—fMoppw*-Fur a haH*r-«cvot sh«*d. For wl»nlright—Tlrfd of Uft*. fj For a lelwapn***—Diapatcbed.

For a tpal wnaluarsj t« weight wtr* U»* ways of ID all lift-'* «•DNIWM

JKo Mruck a And tb-c-hf kk%rA

IS

:5S

Feminitems.

Young ladies who wear pin-backs may be said to bo tied-y. ft No woman over saw. tho time when she had hairpins enough,Ti

Never say "kid glofoaC" EMM#1 "kids" or "gloves." Etiquette demands tills.

Whatever the sise of her shoe, the Wtshlngton Star thinks there is no doubt that Mrs. Belknap "put her foot

V-

A new evening dress," in Paris, is made to button on the shoulders, is sleeveless, and has

arm-holesopen

A sign of

totljp

waist. Mrs. Blair, whose husband was member of President Jackson cabinet usbd to wash dishes alter the callers had partaVfn of her supper.

A Mexican girl living at Tuscelo has throe developed arms. Hhe can do up her hair without cramming her mouth ftill of hair pins.—[Boston Globe.

A correspondent ol the San Francisco Bulletin says the female politician brilliant, persuasive, and often triumph ant. Bat on the whole she |s not^a a 'cess.

4

Bpring—A

woman with her

dress pinned up, a brush in her hand mischief in her eye, and splotches of whitewash on her face.—[Norristown Herald.

The Chicago Post thinks that women have more mental work to perform than men. It must wear the brain to put a border on a lamp-mat.—[Detroit ree Press.

Susan P». Anthony says that sho will

never

settle down and have a hearthstone of her own so long as she lives Now, Susie, dear, suppose that every girl should act that way? "Bishop Haven's mother cooked a turkey on her eighty-eighth birthday," says a fugitive paragraph. There apppearsnothing strange in this, unless .^nv'KA tliA QfTrt nf fhA tltrlcAV-

may be the ago of the turkey. A leading fashion authority says "First calls should only be ten or liiteen minutes long, and these should be returned after threo or four days have elapsed." Puste this oil your lookingglass? ladies.

1

"TJ

A would-be fashionable woman in the West, under sentence of death for murder, hp** only one request to make. She wants tho shade of her dress to match that of the rope. A "corded" silk would be. Herald.

impropriate. [Norristown

A wise young lady will always leave tho parlor.as soon as young men are announced hs calling on her older sisters, in order to hasten expected events so that she mny tome into exclusive possession of. the family piano ftS soon as possible.

A pretty little Ohio schoolmarui tried to whip one of her pupils, a boy of tifteen, the other day, but when she commenced operations- he coolly threw his arms around her neck and gave her a hearty kiss* She went strfdght back to bor desk, and ber face was "just as red."

A young girl in Pennsylvania has made a pair of stockings out of her own hair. She has such an abundance, and it grows so rapidly, it has to be cat off frequently, and she has put it to the purpose mentioned. -The articles are said to be soft and heavy and seemingly of pure hair.

A woman nariaod Mft. St. Ormond died the other day in Troy, and while dytlig objected to having her face washed With aicobol, iayiug that "it was wavy, and she wanted to be a pretty corpse." Woman's natural love of the beautiful remained with ber,to the last tn a rery shocking degree.^. T* the attire of a fashionable lady in 1/09 oouaiated of "a black silk petticoat, with a tod and whito calioo border cherry-colored stays, trimmed with blue and white silver a red and dove-colored damask gown flowered with large trees a yellow satin apron trimmed with white Persian muslin head cloths, with crow-fbot edging a black silk furbelowod soarf and a spotted hood."

Tho Indianapolis News throws In this littlo tit-bit for its more mature female readers: "When Belknap and bis bride were leaving the church after the marriage ceremony, a funeral cortege crossed the bridal train. Believers in omens shook their heads and predicted sorrow and trouble for the nowly-wedded pair. Thoir augurip havATbft6n irui^ than ftitmied."

Ah, girl#, girls 1 See what extravagance did for Mi*. Kolknap. and take warning. Learn to live so that, If you shook!jnarty, you will not outlive your husband* means. The rising generation of young ladies and gentlemen has hfc$}fbo much ropoi Cbeok up,or you're loei." Go bi*fc to first prtntfplei. Learn to do lKu»«*werk do your own sewing and don't marry a man who hasn't got a good trade and you'll be happy.

Mrs. fanriy Kemble Butler writing about a visit to the studio ot the Scottish sculptor MacDonald, in Rome, says: "I remember the beautiful casts, one of l4»iv Wal pole's feet, which were In puri* and admirably formed moreover on a cushion of clay repoted another pair of wonderfully exqatsito fcet, duly clothed Id sttekinge and slipper* which were Lady Coventry's beautiful extremitioa. MacDonald was an intimate friend of hers, and dnrtng her residence In the Phlano Barberini oonstat^ly spciat Ills evenings the re, and on one oocasion when she was indispewed and lying on her eolk, he copied ber feet exactly as they rested on the cushion of her oooehu They cer-

Connubialities.

The wife of Don Carlos has returned to Pau—the same as the wives of worthless husbands usually dow— ^Worcester Press,

Gail Hamilton advises girls to pick out husbands as a boy choo^s his apple She tella them to take the good looking, plump, lively fellows or none,

Brown's mother-in-law died Sunday Her last words were, "1 am going to Heaven." Yesterday morning Brown gave up his pew in church.—[New York Star. "When a woman gits to dispUoa kali ker draw," says a Michigan farmer "it's about time for the family to break up and divide the property."—[Detroit Free Press.

The wives of India no longer burn themselves to death when a husband dies. Christianity teaches them that it is hotter to settle up the estate aud go for anotlior man.

A home for aged couples, whero man and wife will not bo separated in thei old age, has been.established in Phila pelphia. It is thought that a similar in stitution might be endowed at Chicago for about live dollars.

President Girardin, one of the ablest of French judges, says of divorce "Long experience on tho bench has con vinced me that the^ vast majority of persons who sue for judicial separation were not lilted for married life."

Ind. Herald: In the Posey County Circuit Court Henry Hell has tiled his petition for divorce from Pbilopa»na Hell. The parties were married some years since, and proceeded to raise littlo Hell, but finally disagreed and concluded to quit

Tho Rockville (Conn.) Journal tells a beautiful and striking act of Provi deuce. Deacon Noel Pease and his wife Lucinda, united in'marriage more than sixty-three years ago, passed away from life exactly at tho same moment on tho 22d of February. 4ht

Tho Capo Cod girls say, ^Dou't marry until you can stippdrta husband while tho Aberdeen (Scotland) fislierwomen vary the programme by remarkin

Don't marry until you are strong enough to carry your ^nisband^home on your back in a creel."

Grenadines with sjitin stripes and polka spot are out of style. The velvet stripes are again revived.

A fancy for a pocket worn at the side of the dress is an imitation of a tiny game-bag made of the dress material.

Damask and brocaded greadines combined with plainer styles will make the newest and most elegant costumes this summer.

The polonaise with various modifications or changes from that worn a year or two ago is the prominent feature in new spring fashions.

The flowers to be used by the milliners this spring are syringaa, daisies, roses and buds, wall flowers, and different buds in abundance.

Cambrics in imitation of damask, plaided and striped silks, will bo popular this season—the skirt of one pattern and the overdress. or

TERRti HAUTE SATURDA EVENING MAIL.

ifsMi

Fashion's Fancies.

Walking drosses are made very short in front.

V*

Dress waists are made to fitasjsmootbly as gloves.!^ 'JUh^U .»#! Buttons are small and generally of the dress material.

Bright colored ribbon bows are again worn in tho hair. Black and white checked pilks wiljl be worn this summer.

One of the new napkin rings is shaped like a horse collar.^ Calicoes and cheap cambrics are made up quite as elaborately as the most expensive fabrics.

polonaise of

an­

other. Hats with aureola brims, as before hinted, will be the prevailing style for spring wear, as the fact that they are generally becoming, strikes tho laJles favorably.

I don't see why a woman worries to have a trail and then picks it up and carries It after her," is what we heard a female remark upon our streets yesterday. '4f

Very small purses are In use with ladles at present, because of tho discomfort of carrying anything large and bungling in the pockets of drawn-back dresses—and for another obvious reason.

Nets for the.front hsir are of very fine mohalV, almost invisible, and are pinned across the front of the head to keep the crimps or curls in position and prevent their being tossed about by the wind.

It would seem that the general taste was to be for quiet, subdued colors, unless the gay plaids and speckled cloths which are popular with the French, should change the present look of things.

Ralph Waldo Emerson quotes in one of his books the words of a lady who makes the declaration that "the sense of being perfectly well-dressed gives a feeling of inward tranquility which religion is powerless to bestow."

Long dresses are still in vogue, and those made for the hou»e grow longer and longer. On the street they are generally elevated by the hand or some patent arrangement. Skirts trailing on the sidewalks are now seldom seen.

It seems to have been a gift with some ladies the feculty of picking to pieces

and putting together again old dresses. circular of LnatrueUona.

and jackets iu away not only to make the material look as good as new, but to give a really stylish appearance to the costume when remodelled, and in these times when financial failures take place every day, and husbands are fathers in distress, ladles' ingenuity and taste are called into requisition to see how much can be made of little,,and talents unfold In a really wondorfu! manner. ,',5

Striped stockings are passe, arid red petticoats are all tho rage just now in New York. It is considered enregle for every woman who woars one, and walks Broadway, whether the day is rainy or sunshiny, to show a red petticoat—un der the hem of her dress. This is tho rule, and seeing a woman without one is the exception.

It i.s proper for a lady when receiving guests to be in front of or near tho door of tho room. If tho entertainment is ball or party where many are expected she bhould stand, but if a dinner, she may bo seated until some one enters. Sheshould invariably shako hands with both ladies aud gentlotnen.

Dress skirts are made extremely narrow and allow of very littlo if any bus tlo. This lasliion brings the )rhictHic dress, or old-fashioned Gnbrirffe skirt, back to us. Their plainness—ifobjected to—is sometimes relieved by a Watteau plaii in the back.

Golden Words.

Taste is the next gift to genius.—[Lo well. Great sorrows nobly borne are great dignities.

We cannot be pardoned .in jpasses or saved in crowds. 1

When life fronts death prayer is the soul's native tongue. It requires more nerve to await dan #er than it does to face it.

There is nothing so fatal to comfortlus well as to docorutn, as fuss. A quiet, self-possessed air is tho pass port of a gentleman, the world over

Many a soul works out its salvation by love that would never do it by faith The savings bank of human existence is the weekly Sunday.—[North British Review.

Days full of cloud and darkness when the earth is full of light and sunshine is not life.

When we have discovered the -motive that actuates a life we have learned its measure.

Men are not divided in this world into sheep and goats there are many grada tions of evil.

It took thousands of ages to fit the earth lor man and it may take as long to fit niaii for the earth. broader and truer platform of thought and li ffi has emerged fr night of doubt and gloom.

A woman dictates before marriage in order that she may have an appetite for submission afterward,—[George Eliot.

When a man lives with God his Tolcr shall be as sweet as the murmur Of the brooksand the rustle of the corn.—[Emerson.

The palo stars, grown white with watching, stole noiselessly away and the morning awoke when the dawn touched her eyelids.

Many souls that seem hardened and lost only wait for their springtime lo show forth the richness and beauty folded within them.

Pain, like a trusty sentinel, guards evdry avenue leading to the citadel of life, and we are admonished whenever danger approaches, it *?.•{•»'?!

Beautiftil lives have grown up froth tho darkest places, as pure white lilies ful| of fragrance have blossomed on slimy, stagnant waters. dne thing is clear to me that no indulgence of passion destroys the spiritual nature so much as respectable selfishness.—[George McDonald.

Were I but free from sin and the world around me free of it, I would erave no better state and no finer heaven than that into which I was born.— [M urray.

We deplore the outrages which accompany revolutions. But the more violent the outrages, the moro assured we fecL that a revolution was necessary. —[Macanlay.

Fires have been kindled all along the mountain-tops, so that In the, shadows of much offcvliat was once called evil of dimly see the shining footsteps of the Almighty.—[Duff Porter.

The history of any private family bowever humble, coula it be fully related for five or six generations, would illustrate tho state and progress of society better than the most elaborate dissertation.— [Soutbey.

Many readers judge of the power of a elr feelings, savage tribes determine the

book by the shock it gives the as sonio savage tribes dete

King

wer of muskets by their recoil, that considered best which fairly prostrates the purchaser.—[Longfellow.

Pity is about the meanest wish that ono man can oflfer another. I had rather have a ten dollar greenback that bad been torn in two and pasted together than sll the pity there Is on the npper side ot the earth. Pit3* is nothing more than a quiet satisfaction that I am a great deal better than you are and that I Intend to keep so.—[Josh Billings. 'iV"*' ftherry

Time"

Ajrn—

"Lily of the Field."

We are now giving to every I&00 ywuiy subscriber a choice of the above Chromos. They are catalogued aad sold in the ate stores atfLOO per eopr fcut will be given to all persons whe send us their names as sabact: ben enclosing tZJX) the price of the paper for one year. These pictures are perfect copies In every delicate tint and ooior of magnlftoeMt paintings costing hundreds of dollars. All who have any idea of or lore of art SU1 In love with them at Arst sight.

Men who llare Other Basinem Are wanted to add that of canvassing for The Mall. Liberal commUNUMia. ttend

MMfe-

rom every

Sins of tho parents may bo visited upon their children, but it is that the sting may strike back into the parents' hearts.

It is our prerogative to command our selves, not events not contend with the inevitable, while we neglect the ^ossi ble.

God's grapes of blessing are not gathered from tho thorns of wrong, nor ~tbe figfe of his abiding peace from the thistles of evil.

Some pe.ople with grea| merit are vfiry disgusting others with'great fau.U$.gre very pleasing.—[Rpchefoucaujt,

Sociability in churches is a very impo: tant element of Christianity. Many a man has been savod by some one's simply taking him by the hand and expressing ordinary interest in bis welfare. The religion that keeps people apart is a sham that whi^li brings tbem together is genuine. -r

THANKS

uFR0M

!'4 -»i'

THE DEPTHS OF

THE HEART."

WELLINGTON, Lorain Co.. O., Aug. 24,'74. DK.R. W. PIERCE, Buffalo, N. Y.: DEAR SIR—Your medicines, Golden Medical Detcovery, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, have proved

of

the greatest ter

vice to me. Six month* ago no one thought that could poasibly live long. I had a complication of diseases—sr.rofu la manifesting itself in eruptions and great blothcbea on mr head, that made such sores tl»at I cou-ld not have my hair combed without causing me much suffering also causing swollen elands, tonsils enlarged, enlarged or "thick neck," ai.d large and nuroerou* boils. I also suffered from a terrible Chronic Catarrh, and in fact I was so diseased that life was a burden to me. I had tried many doctor* with no benefit. I finally procured onehalf dozen bottles of your Golden Medcal Discovery pnd one dozen Sage's Catarrh Remedy and commenced their use. At first I was badly discouraged, but after taking four bottles of the Discovery I began to improve, and when I had taken the remainder I was well. In addilior/to the'uae of the Discovery I applied a solution of Iodine to the Goitre or thick neck, as you advised in pamphlet wrapping, and it entirely disappeared. Your Discovery is certainly the most wonderful blood medicine ever invented. I thank God and you, from the depths of my heart, for the great good it has done me.

Very

gratefully, MRS. L. CHAFFEE.

Most medicines which are advertised as blood purifiers and liver medicines contain either mercury, in some form, or potassium and iodine variously combined. All of these have strong tendency to break down the blood corpuscles, and debilitate and otherwise permanently injure the human system, and should therefore be discarded. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, on the other hand, being composed of th£ fluid extracts 01 siative plants, barks and roots, will in no case produce injury, its effects being strengthening and curative only. Sarsapharilla, which used to enjoy quite a reputation as a blood purifier, is a renedy of thirty years ago, and my well give place, as it is doing, to the more postive and valuable vegetable alteratives which later medical investigation and discovery has brought to light. In Scrofula or King's Evil, White Swellings, UlcerB, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inilamation, Indolent Inflamation, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin and Sore Eyes as in all other blood dieases, Dr. Pierces Medical Discovery has shown its great remedial powers, caring the most obstinate and intractable caces. Sold by all dealers in medicines.

t-

NEW DRY- GOODS

Irtft I' 4M

li •*. ft*-" ii

311 ,-»VU

"J/ tn 1 4-t

If

1*

"-•.J"-

I

for

,' 'ft 't

sJlfi'* taf

rtu\'rt

5

?»«v

-11 I tM

'.-tf le't

•s *$ *,n 4 k, I .1 I5" O 5." fUH'f f.f'j.»•»-''1 i°&< '5 -p. i"V ¥1 tm t*v 1*

DOBBINS' STARCH POLISH!

3

A Great DiscoTerj!

By the u.v of which every family may clve thrlr I.lnen that btJIllnut polish peculliu to fine l(iui:try work. Having time and labor In Ironing, more tlinn its entire cost. Warranted.* Auk for Dobbins'. DOBBINS, BltO. & fO.,N. Fourthftt., Phila.

For nale iij Terre Haute by

llUI'MAX & cox,

A I (r

TMK tpt-P-

1 I SJ8

',4t

txj.--

TERRE HAUTE,

t* '"J M*

i--

Grand Display,

,»T

1 *t U*

1

,•':!

tm

We have the Goods to do it with! Excellent assortment of desirable Spring

Woollens, for Mens', Youths' and Boys'

make up to measure or sell by the yard. Trices

1

1 WltO^ESALE GROCERS, Corner Mala and Fifth Streets.

TemvHante Ice Co.

WHOLESALE and RETAIL DEALER Ortlce and Rcfntl Knpply Depot, 173 Main Mre t.

For ninety days from April 1st, our rates will bef0 cents per hundred to Hotels, Restaurants. Saloons, Kutchera, and all large consumers, and 05 cents to families. 1URcrvlng the right to increase from July 1st to 75 cents and I dollar for the Imlaurc of the season. These rates Kuarantotd and written ooutracts given if desired. I

THE ENEMY OF DISEASE.

1

THE FOE OF PAIN

To Mail and A£?itNt Is the tirnixl Old

md^»

MUSTANG"

LINIMENT^-' WII'CH HAS STOOD TUG TEST OF

40YKVRS. THERE IS IfO SORE IT WIT,I, *OT 1IKAI., AROUMEKBNO ITWII.I. NOT CURE. NO ACHE, NO 1»AIN

AFFLICT*

THE

THAT

1I1J» AN BODY. OK

TIIK HOMY OF A

nOKSEOKOTHER

DOMESTIC' AWIMAI.

THAT

..-M# ,kte. ivf-rA*

DOES

NOT YIEI.D TO ITS MAFILO TOUCH. A IIOTTIjE «'OSTIN« 85c., 50., or1 OL.OO., HAS OFTEN SAVED

THE

1IFE OF A HUMAN REIXU. AND RESTORED TO LIPK'ANI) USEFULNESS MAXY A VALUABLE HORSE.

.to*.<p></p>HOPSE!

rv

1

d'»

If

lo

I

i$n

WESTERN BAZAAR

1MD.

1 1

2 '.•-

Uis-

.*r' 1

4

I.'-ff.:

Srt turday, April 15th.t

A

Latest Novelties in Dry Goods.

SEE HEIiEI

Spriri'g Time-Come Again!

NEW SPRING STOCK NOW OPENING!

FREDERICKgJCHLEWING'SJ Yon will want to ftlaed Your Winter Clothing aud fit* yourself out in ftomething XI re, Wood and 1 Iiuap. j"

be undersold by any other house. Perfect fits guaranteed and goods represented only as we believe them

We mean every word we say but we want you to be con vinced by your own inspection that we will do the best with you in furnishing you with

your

Gents' Furnishing Goods* As a great point toward satisfactory clothing is in getting a "good fit," we furnish you a complete fitting gar-! ment before it leaves our store. Come and see us, at 217 Main street, near Seventh. Yours continually,

i.

1

.w

I I- 'X 1 i, rla®i',g

.y%i i' IT! fj.Jti'tl-.S •if jit it«»-,sy,( 4

Jtf v-,'

1

t" ,y I 70 I ^4 -i A

1

I -isfy

April 13th and 1411i.

{v

«. tIJl :1

+t. ".'t If't 'j A O -*f I5 W**»i

U--M

itm V"' "'•f W?1'-

,Jf

f'J I tMl% •^*4^1I ,^v is To £*.•?*« "d r- Vi I* i'i *f

t*

j" :i mf if ••'ri-i dfan -1 U.&*..:£•. 1' 'ult

»»!i

tr

11

1

hm,

t*-» -rfl rtl:

ts -i.,

Goods,

in*

Wear,

which wo

shall

not

to be.

Spring Clothing and

FREDERICK SCHLEWING. i.