Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 9, Number 22, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 November 1878 — Page 4
THE MAIL
A. PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
P. S. WESTFALL,«'»T"
BDITOFT AND PROPRIETOR.
1
"TKRRE HAUTE, NOV. 30, 1878
18 THE BAR UNPOPULAR Under the above caption Judge Asa Iglehart, of Evamrville, contributes an -vrtidle to the American Law Register for November, which would be Interesting to many ••then besides lawyers.
After pointing oat some reasons why the professkm might naturally be wore •or less unpopular, such as the hostile ^contact into "which the lawyer is brought with all classes of men in the trial of cases, the -disagreeable duty iwposed upon him-of exposing dislumesty and erittae Msong all professions, «nd the odium oast upon the bar federally by a class of Iknavisb and unprincipled fellow® Wfco hang upon'the outskirts of the profession and eke out a livelihood by means of dishonest and ••professional praotfoes, Judge Iglebart refers to an aittote in the American *Law Review, oo "Jtorsmiah Mason and the Bar," from tbeipen of Mr. C. H. Hill, which assumes 4batXhe American bar 4s not popular, aufMs declining in ability and influence, Ur, Hill, after stating that at one time 4a*this country eminence in the law led 4he most spoedily of «11 roads to high political honoTs, and that the majority •of the famous lawyewof the past found place either in the House of Repre•eentatives or the Senate, he goes on to «ay that what was once the rule has be•oome the exception «*nd that, with rare ,exceptions, the names of the eminent -lawyers of the country are no longer on the roster of Congress.
Judge Iglehart is one of those who do not believe that the bar is unpopular, or that it is declining in political or social position. "The alleged unpopularity and decline," be says, "are both based upon the proposition that in the highest political positions very few leading or eminent lawyers are found. Is this position well founded It is admitted that formerly it was different. Not to speak of the fact that the president and all his cabinet are lawyers, and all but one men who won their present position at the bar, and stepped from its active duties into-the Cabinet, a call of the Senate roll alone, and an examination of the history of its members, will show that there never was more legal ability in that body during any twenty years of its history, than during the last treaty, taking into consideration even the nam* bers. And at the present time it will bear comparison in this respect with any period In its history."
Turning to the House of Represents tives, Judge Iglehart finds that not only are the members, as a rule, lawyera, but that for a man from any other profession to be oome a leader there, is a thing oo exceptional as to excite surprise. He thinks that when every department of the government, State or national, is under the direct control of the legal profession, that when from its ranks come the president, cabinet, the leaders in both houses of Congress, and nearly all our foreign ministers, the idea that the profession is declining either in political or social rank, is untenable.
It would seem that the Judge's positions are well taken. It is always the fashion to overrate the past or rather, perhaps, to underrate ttbe present. Doubtless there is quite as much virtue and ability inthe legal profession to-day as there has been at any former period of its history and possibly, too, net more eoalawags and shysters in proportion to the numbers. But when we look back •upon the past, the names of it great lawjren, its Marshalls, its Storys, its Webwaters, robed ia tkat enchantment which •distance lends, rise upon our view, 'While the great multitude of incooipe•tent and dishonest tricksters, who cast •reproaoh upon the profession in their day, as in outs, have sunk forever oat of «lgbt and memory. And so it will be tgenerations heaoe, when the present has •become the past, and men look back wrltb,pride to the great lawyers of to-day.
THE CLIFF-DWELLERS. A writer in Scribner for Deceii4er gives an interesting account of a caoe of people, called "the •cliff dwellers," of which itw of our readers .have probably ever heard. Many ruim of this ancient and long ex dinet race it As said are to be seen in Colorado and Arizona. To use the words of tb« writer, "The mysterious mound builder* fade lato comparative insignifi «anoe before the grander and mora anient etiff-dweUers, wboee castles lift ibelr towers amid the sands of Arisona »nd crown the terraced slopes of the Rio Manoo* aad the Movenweep."
In 1871 a division of the Hayden Survey was totalled investigate these ancient rains and foactd that they covered an area«f several thousand square mHea, ewbraeiag the adjoining comer* of Colorado, Utah, Arisona and New Mexico. The region is remote from civtliutfoa, the nearest raltread point being from two to three buadred miles distant. Throughout this region the picturesque rain* of tfcis ancieot people are scattered, houses perched upon the aide* of the great canons so high that they look like mere specks, and the remains of towns and villages ia the bottom lands. Home of the houses havo two stories, and a law, four stories, hut generally they are not higher than a man's head. One building is as large as the Patent Office and contains five hundred rooms. The most remarkable rains have been found in New Mexico, wbtoh, in site tad grandeur of
tion, are said to equal any of the present buildings in the United States, excepting the Capitol at Washington, lite houses .are built of stone with floors of round logs. Tne dimensions of one ruin are 440 feet by 250 feet, with remnants of four stories. It is built of small pieces of a rioh buff aandstone, arranged so oompactlyas to present the appearanoe of a homogeneous surfaoe.
Cemeteries, with monumental tablets, have been found, but us no bones hate been discovered in them, but charred wood and ash heaps mingled with the sand, it ia thought that these anolent people were fire worshippers and cremated the bodies of their dead. The pottery found in all the ruins is thin, with a hard finiah and painted in colors that have lost none of tbeir original brightness. Stone implements of various kinds are also found among the ruins. The present Pueblo Indians of New Mexioo and Arizona are believed to be the remnant of the descendants of these anoient cliff-dwellers.
Thus at length do we disoqver "that successive and unnumbered civilizations had probably flourished and de cayed upon this coutlnent before Colum bus crossed the sea.
WK are reminded of the slow tortiai of the inquisition and its shocking in humanity by a case in Vermont. EdwiiT C. Hayden was convicted of the murder of his wife in August, 1876, aud for an almost simultaneous assault with intent to kill his brother-in-law. It is a principle of law that the greater crime swamps the lesser, and yet he was in prison for an assault at the time he was convicted for murder. The Supreme Court of Vermont, on an appeal for a change of venue, refused to entertain it, and Hayden was brought before Judge Barrett, of Windsor, who has just pronounced the most extraordinary sentence known to our judicial history The prisoner is to be hanged on the first Friday after the first Tuesday of Jann ary, 1881, and in the meantime to be con fined at hard labor till within three months before the day set for the Qxeou tion, when he is to be placed in solitary confinement till the day and hour when he is led to the gallows. The old Spanish inquisitors would be delighted with the Vermont judge. Hayden declares in his confession that he was erased by failure in business and intoxication, and pleads for a lighter penalty. To pot off a man's execution until the winter of 1881, and torture him by hard labor and solitary confinement until that time, is bringing cruelty down to a very (fine point. ____________
THE Marion county jail now contains two murderers pronounced deserving of death, the last being Quetig, who killed Mary McGlew at the Spencer House, 'in September. Although his oounsel tried hard to show tbhat the prisoner was in sane from the effects of epileptic £te, the jury was out but a short time before bringing in their verdict of guilty. The next victim is Merrick, whose tote no body seems to have any doubt -about Tate will come along in his order, but will hardly risk bis neck with a Marion county jury. The probabilities we that Achey, Guetig and Merrick will «wing from the same scaffold. If so it will*be well. The danger is, however, that having thus wreaked its vengeance on this trio of criminals, the pendulum of public sentiment may swing to the op posite extreme again, and no murderer be hung for a score of years. It is this spasmodic dispensation of justice tfcat is detrimental. What is wanted atnwe all things in the enforcement of the Jaws against crime is the element of certainty. It matters less what the character of the punishment is than that it be inexorably administered. Knowing the effects of fire, A man will no more put his haud into it than if to do so would be certain death. We need to imitate nature's laws in this element of certainty.
Ingersoll is being answered most numerously and effectively all over the country. Ministers and lecturers are refuting his statements, especially that lot ot them called "Some Mistakes of Moses." Rabbi Wise, of Cincinnati, lectured on the subject last week and drew this graphic picture:
It is not hard to see why the people go to bear the Colonel. They go to the circus to see the clown, they go to the thea ter to look and to laugh at the comedian, and they go to Co!. Ingersoll's lecture, because the lecture is full of fun, and fun la what they want. There is a lack of good humorists, and there is a plenitude of slander, and the Colonel, in choosing his field, ebose that which paid best— humor and ribaldry. He chose to sneer at &uman virtue and human piety, and as a business man he has chosen well, for the business has paid. He makes plenty of money, and he hurts nobody. His lectures can have no moral effect, tor they are only fun, and hare no force.
TKK committee appointed at the May term of the Supreme Court to report a plan to enable that Court to dispose of the accumulated business which Is now three yean behind, reported at the open ing of the November term, last Wednesday, the following plan: first, that the Legislators, at ita coming session, provide for the appointment of a commission of six competent lawyers to sit for the period of two years and, in conjunc tion with the Supreme Court, decide the cases now pending before the Court eeoondiy, indorsing the proposition for the establishment of intermediate appellate courts, not exceeding three, to which appeals shall first be taken from the lower courts. The report of the committee was adopted.
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No man can enter Iodlaiuy^ri^ir without being grabbed by the arm and led to ri«w the excavation tor titra State House. It is an immense hole, ^viewed with pride" by the average lodianapolltai) at least ooce a day.
TERRE SAUTE SATURDAY. EVENING
TM® negro is dying out in Congress. In the Forty-seoond Congress there were nine negroes in the FortyHh^rd, seven} in the Forty-fourth, four in the Forty-fifth, three in the Forty-sixth there will be none unless O'Hara, of North Carolina, gets a certificate, which is donbtf nl. It is unwise not to keep a few colored men in Congress, for it will be remembered that in the closing hoursof the last session the only sober man on the committee on enrolled bills was a colored member from South Carol 1 na, who attended to all the work without any help from his colleagues who had discussed the whisky question until they were unable to perform dvvy on "standing" committee.
THE Morton Monumental Association has resolved to erect a bronie statue of the late Senator, at Indianapolis, the cost not to exceed 4&0.C00. There is a little over $1,000 now In the treasury of the association, and about ?2,000 of unpaid subscriptions still outstanding. It be hooves the friends of Senator Morton to see that the effort to ereot some suitable monument to his memory does not end in failure. __________
MOST people will be surprised to learn that the annual production of butter and cheese in this country exceeds the value of the entire wheat crop, is worth four times more than the potato crop, one-third more than the cotton crop and only a fifth less than the corn crop. Moreover, that we have six tiiqps as many oows as Great Britain, and twice as many as France. This is a great •country. _________
FIVE revenue officers killed and thirteen wounded, in the South, during the past year, while in .the discbarge of their •official duties, and none of the murder' ers punished, does not speak well for the law-abiding obaracter of that section of the country. It is probable that hereafter the guilty parties will not escape so easily.
INDIANAPOLIS excels in the matter of church-going. According to the Journal over 25,000 people attended the ohurch and Sunday school services in that city last Sunday. This is certainly a good showing, but it don't help to explain the catalogue of murders for which our neighbor has been phenomenal during the past few months.
INGERSOLL, is thinking of crucifying Shakespeare in a lecture. The great dramatist was a strong believer in the .Christian religion, as his works testify
If the diabolic "Bob" is not satisfied on that point, he has only to read the words which Shakespeare wrote for his own tomb at Stratford-on-Avon. He is standing rebuke to Ingersoll.
THE Indianapolis pulpit breathed out "threatenings and slaughter" upon the red handed criminals of that city last Sunday. If the atmosphere of the capital doesn't become unpomfortably warm for murderers pretty soon, the press and the pulpit will not be to blame for it.
LAST Monday, Judge Burns, before whom the case was on trial out of which grew the murder of Love by Warren Tate, fined the latter $10,000 for contempt of court in committing the assault upon Love, who was a witness in the case. ____________
CONGRESS sets in on Monday and the stream of gab will begin to flow.
THE BETTER WORLD.
CHURCHES. PASTORS AND PEOPLE. 4 f-1* ivji
Rev. F. M. Pavey dedicates a new Methodist church, at Summit Grove, north of Clinton, to-morrow.
Rev. J. M. Johns will preach at the Universallst Church to-morrow (Sunday) morning and evening, at he uspal hours. All are invited,
At the First Congregational Church. Services to-morrow at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Preaching by Rev. T. R. Bacon
At the Baptist Church to-morrow, morning sermon on "The Lord's Kindred." Sunday school concert in the. evening. C. R. Henderson, pastor.
At Asbury Chapel to-morrow, quarterly love feast at 9)4, preaching by Rev. Mr. Lee at 10J4, Sunday school at 2M, evening service by the local preacher at 7 p. m.
Services at the usual hours to-morrow at the Christian Chapel, by G. P. Peale, pastor, whose morning subject is "The New Heart." Evening subject: "Solomon's Estimate."
St. Stephen's Church. Services as fol lows: Morning Prayer at 1QK a. m. Litany, Celebration of the Holy Communion 11 a. m. Evening Prayer and Sermon, p. m. Wednesday, 8% p. m. Friday, and holy days at 10# a. m.
The New York Observer mentions the case of a Kentucky Presbyterian minister who, at a Monday meeting of hie brethren, prayed, saying, "Lord, Thou hast fieen by the morning papers how the Sabbath was desecrated yesterday."
The execrable intonation and inflexion with which some ministers read the Bible in their pulpits was considered by a recent meeting of Baptist eleigy in New York, and a desire for an improvement declared. Tne New York Sun thinks a Sunday evening service of Bible readings on special subject*, read vividly and dramatically as Shakespeare is read, would be an attraction.
A sensational preacher in Newport, R. L, announced tor bis subject, "How Jonah Lost His Umbrella." His bearers sup poeed that possibly the prophet bad Uils useful pieoe of personal belongings In his bind when he was tossed Into the Mediterranean and they were
anxious to know whether the whale swallowed It or whether Jonah dropped it into the sea. Imagine tbeir disappointment when they found that the sensationalist wanted to discuss only what became of Jonah's gourd, Bible students will remember that this climber suddenly grew up aa a shade for Jonah and as suddenly withered. To apeak of it as an umbrella is just as correct as to speak of the Newport preacher as a sensationalist.
The Rev, James Hodgson, Adventist of Petersburg, Va., tbua advises his congregation: "Get your ascension robes ready by the 5th day of next January, for that day will see the end of the world."
As a novelty In the way of advertising church services, we give the following, taken from an English exchange: "St John's English Episcopal Church, Lochee Road. The Rev. Dr. Lane will deliver his annual flower lecture on Sunday evening next. Gentlemen will please wear a flower in their buttonhole. Ladies know best where to arrange them. Subject: •Lessons from Flowers.'"
Among the Best "minister? of Canada there is a growing prejudice against the peripatetic evangelists who have no particular authority to preach, and no connection with any respectable organization. A leading minister recently said, in debating the matter: "It is to be remembered that everyone who split his hair in the middle, and carried a limp Bible in his hand, was not authorized to preach the Gospel. There never was a time when there were more nondescript men preaching without authority, and it was asubjectof comment that ministers were more easily imposed on by oily-tongued wanderers than be any Other class."
Three clergymen's opinions of thetbeater are at hand* The Rev. W.N. Richardson, of Medway, Massachusetts, said that the history of the stage was a history of sin and shame. He censured the newspapers for devoting so much encouragement to actors: "I ask, in all sincerity and honesty, what kind of taBte is that that admires the theater, with the tinsel and gaudy trappings, the bedizened and painted actress, and the lewd dancing girl on the stage If the theater is a school of morals, why woold those who patronize it blush to admit the actors and actresses to their homes and tables? Shun the theater as you would a pest bouse. It is an enemy to morals, And curses society where it ex ists." The Rev. A. W. Lightburne, of Baltimore, said theaters found their chief advocate among sinners. He marvelled that the people of this en' lightened country would support a band of infamous characters, dancers, fiddlers boxers and other similar vampires who feed upon the community." The Rev Henry Morgan, of Boston, suggested that the bankrupt Globe Theater be made a house of refuge, with this inscription over the door "Here fell a thousand of Boston's most brilliant men. This hospital commemorates the spot where builder and player, proprietors and people went down to common ruin."
The periodical revival of the proposition to abolish the itineracy of the minis try in the Methodist church has come again, and there is more or less discussion of it in the east. A convention of laymen in the church considered it last week ki Brooklyn, and the feeling was largely in favor of permanent pastorates, when a decided change came over the spirit of the meeting on the reading of the follow ing letter: "London, Aug. 8,1788.—To Lady Max well —My Dear Lady: It is certain many persons both in Scotland and England (•and Brooklyn,' added Brother Lee,) would be well pleased to have the same preachers always, but we can not forsake the plan of action which we have followed from the beginning. For fifty years God has been pleasea to bless the itinerant plan—the last year most of all. It must not be altered till I am removed. ,and 1 hope it will remain till our Lord comes to reign on earth. "JOHN WESLEY."
DON'T TRY THE EXPERIMENT. Courier-J ournal. A good many parents have tried Mr. Ingersoll's method with children, and thoee parents are weeping now. c.
Bead the Following Letter.
NEW YORK, November 19, 1878.
Mr. W. D. Jamtt, Star Notion Houte: DEAR SIR: We take great pleasure in informing you that Messrs. TKEFOUSSK & Co., of Chaumont,were adjudged two Gold Medals at the Paris Exposition,%oce for excellence in the dressing, dyeing and preparing of skins, and the other for superiority in the manufactured gloves, these beine the highest honors awarded to any manufacturer.
I** Respectfully fours, WlLMERDING, HOGUET A Co~, Sole agent* for the TRSFOUSBE GLOVE in the United States.
These gloves, which have no equal in quality and style, and which have receivsuch honorable recommendation at the Pari" Exposition, as »ell as at the World's Fair, at London, in 1862, and at Dublin, in 1865, ire sold at the Star Notion House, 617 Main street.
To Our Patrons and the Poblic. To correspond with the times we have placed the price of livery and boarding horses as low as the lowest. Our capacity for boarding homes and caring for vehicles is not equalled in the city, which we invite inspection to prove. Our livery outfit of fine side-bar Baggies, Phaetons, Sundowns and Carriages, and first class driving horses and carriage teams is not
excelled anywhere. We are boarding horses for $12 per month are hiring single hone and buggy for funerals for $1.50 sending our fine carriages to funerals for $4 and hiring carriages for calling and parties, Ac, at a corresponding low price out ail our livery at rates.
—Shawls, Nubias, Laggings, Gloves, Mitts, Hosiery,Scarfs and other woollen goods opened in abnndanoe this week at the busy bouse of Foster Brothers.
-That elegant line of ladles' vests at 60 cents and the lambs' wool red underwear at Foster Brothers' are being bought up very rapidly by the knowing ones, for they are elegant goods and are marked very cheap.
—If yon would like a perfect fitting corset of the very best makes and at very low prices, go to the Star Notion House. They have Dr. Warner's Corsets in all the most desirable qualities, and a full stock of other standard makes in twenty different styles.
Mrs. M. M. Pbalon invites the ladles to call at No. 121^ North Fourth street, for embroidery, stamping chain stltohing and braiding. Also for cleaning white furs. »v tjal ••*!?&?. .i, GOOD NEWS sr' to shirt buyers. More of those elegant unlaundried shirts at 49c, and the best shirt in Terre Haute at any price for 89c. Make early application while we have all the sizes. FOSTER BROTHERS.
—Now is the time for persons contemplating the purchase of a good organ to examine the beautiful Palace Organ sold by J. A. Marshall, No. 306 Main street. New and very attractive styles have juht been received. There is no botter organ made than the Palace. A trial always proves its merit.
Tli© Result.
Since marking down our cloaks to nearly one-half of former prices we have sold a fearful amouut of them. When a lady can buy a $2 cloak for 1, a 96 cloak for $3.38, a 910 cloak for |5.97, and so on, she is not slow to take advantage of the opportunity. Remember .our cloaks are new and desirable, and not carried over from last year.
FOSTER BROTHERS.
if J? H. F. SCHMIDT & CO, The jewellers opposite the Opera House, are giving some rare bargains in fine watches, jewelry, clocks, elegant silverware, opera glasses, fine cameo sets, diamond rings, Ac. They are enterprising young men, Bkillful workmen, and to secure trade and establish business will offer inducements the other dealers will not care to present. Give them a call, see their goods and learn their prices.
a As to Furs. No one who wants the greatest value tor their money should think of buying a single article in the Fur line till they have looked through Foster Brothers' stock. You will be surprised at what good sets of furs they will show you at $1.50 and |2 a set, while for $4 you can buy an elegant set of beautiful Dark Alaska, Muff and Boa. A good Mink set, Boa and Muff, $5. Finer goods in proportion.
All fur men predict a cold winter and a big advance in the price of furs. Early buyers will get best assortments and lowest prices.
FOSTER BROTHERS.
!k Wright & King
will have, to-day, Saturday, their Utinal supply of good things in their line for Sunday, and at all times during the week buyers will be able to find in their stock the best the market affords, at reasonable prices.
Dellgbt all Lovers of Sweet Scents. The Unique Perfumes made by Dr. Prioe delight all lovers of sweet scents. Dr .Price's Forget-Me-Not,Ylang-Ylang, Musk Rose, Alista Bouquet, and bis other odors, are the most exquisite that can be imagined. ,rf
Another Tumble
-IN-
SUGARS
\W- -AT-
W.W. OLIVER & CO S.
9K pounds Grannlated 8ugar, $1. 10 pounds Standard A Sugar, fl. 10 pounds Extra Sugar, $1. 11 pounds Yellow C. suar, fl. t•' 11% pounds nice Brown sugar, fl.
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tHereuvamR.Allcheapest,'.•?toallall'thethethisgrodolcan-doesHowneverastreet,careRippe-furbeI'eminan'Ianyand6fFrunt,"groserees,W.withuvcontrolswhyManetown.agin.triedandtiretime,orbuyinontruck,suppliesHemistakentotradeit,betterI'veIisbestlifetothatmine.bemandodoesmyuvtherynQtbiggestsebecanfolkstoe's"Whitewhichisplacecountrykindstable.inmatter.Ithatbusinessisnoisknowit,
expect tellings
lar thare than I can any other place in Tarry Hot. I've persu *ded many a oneto try the "White Frunt," and I'vo never known an instunoe or tbeir being dissatisfied. Rich an' poor, high air low, air waited on alike. If you've got but a dime you air waited on as pleasantly as though you had a ten dollar bill to buy with. He's got together & nice lot of grub to-day, among whioh may be mensbuned chickens, dressed ducks, turkeys, squirrels, quails, oysters, cellery, cranberries, chow-chow, mixed pickles, poprorn, sour kraut in kits, mince meat, Prinoe of Wales sallad, etc., etc.
Will Remain.
It will be seen by the notice in the daily papers that Dr. von "Moschzisker will yet remain with us some time. New applications have obliged him tochange his intention of soon leaving Terre Haute. This will be good news to
Btyles,
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all who desire his treatmeut, and they should at once profit by bis prolonged stay and the opportunity they will havo to receive the full benefit of his successful treatment, which will need no further commentary, as his great cures have been illustrated in hundreds of the severest cases. He still remains at the Terre Haute Honse where all who need his medical skill should at once apply. 23 tf. —The best one dollar three button Kid in the city, in black, opera and street shades, are selling at the Star Notion House.
Fresh Batter 15 Cents a Pound At SMITH & BURNETT'S, southwest corner of Fourth and Walnut streets.
For Sale.
|7K)RSA.LE—ORGAN—I HAVE A GOOD, substantial double reed Parlor Organ, which I want to dispose of at About half its value, aa I have n» further use for it
J. R. CHAMBERS.
Paisley,
Broche,
-AND-
Kashemyre Shawls!
Elegant assortment just opened and the largest line ever shown in the city. Our Shawls are guaranteed to be first-class goods and our prices to be as low as can Be bought, or money wiU be refunded—if not satisfactory.
HOLIDAY PRICES
Single Sbawls: $4.50, 6.00, 7.50, 10.00, 12.50, 15.00. 20.0). 25.00, 30.00, 35.00, 40.00 and 50.00 eacn.
Double Shawls: $10 00, 12 50, 15 00, 20 00, 2o 00, 30 00,35 00, and 40 00 each. In filled and open, black and colored center*.
Wool Shawls,
New
new prices, v* A large
a
410/ fttfJjS 4288
Are Fifteen Hundred Men's Youths' and Boys'
OVERCOATS
Marked down 25 and 50 per cent, to
CLOSE QUICK
I 1 WK WILL
MAKE BUSINESS
IF WE CANNOT
A E O N E
TnTP THE "BOSS" OUTFITTER^ vJHij Of the Masculine Gender. 422 Main Street, 4 doors West of Fifth.
lot
just opened. Look at our $5.00 Beaver Shawl, it is equal to any shawl sold early at $7 $0.
LADIES' CLOAKS
Examine our stock and prices before you buy. We can save you from $2 00 to 5 00 on every Cloak.
HOBERG, ROOT & CO.,
OPEBA HOUSE.
MENS ELISIAN
RUN bjeayer
OVERCOATS,
$20, MASKED BOW*
&
$15
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